Trump ally Steve Bannon attacked Elon Musk and said he would “do anything” to keep the world’s richest person out of the White House in a new interview with an Italian newspaper, weeks after Bannon publicly derided Musk for his defense of a skilled visa program.
Bannon tore into Musk, revealing another fissure in the MAGA world over Trump's highly touted Stargate project.
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon slammed Tesla CEO Elon Musk on Wednesday, calling him out for his criticism of President Trump’s newly announced infrastructure project for artificial
Donald Trump's former chief strategist Steve Bannon is going after other members of the president ... worker program takes jobs away from American citizens. "I will have Elon Musk run out of here by Inauguration Day," Bannon said in an interview at the ...
But I think the other 50 percent of the MAGA realm’s internal conflict, the part that reflects genuine and serious disagreement over ideological visions and political outcomes, is important too, and has global consequences well beyond the scope of the Trump presidency.
Steve Bannon, in an interview with POLITICO, said Musk “brought in his own personal vendetta” when the world’s richest man began railing against Trump’s announcement of a $500 billion dollar investment in AI infrastructure from tech giants OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank.
Steve Bannon has yet again slammed Elon Musk—this time for the billionaire’s petty criticism of an artificial intelligence project rolled out by Donald Trump that involves his tech rival Sam Altman. Bannon rebuked Musk for bringing ”his own personal vendetta” into the White House and suggesting Altman,
This is part of Hello, Trumpworld, Slate’s reluctant guide to the people who will be calling the shots now—at least for as long as they last in Washington.
Trump’s former White House strategist fires latest volley in MAGA civil war as he compares tech titans to Imperial Japan’s generals giving their unconditional surrender
A rift has emerged within the Republican Party, largely centred on Elon Musk's influence. His support for the H-1B visa programme has drawn criticism from Trump's base, leading to tensions with key figures like Steve Bannon and Vivek Ramaswamy.
Over 70 per cent of all H-1B visas issued by the U.S. go to Indian nationals. As a result, the Indian-origin population in America has tripled over the last 25 years—from 1.6 million in the early 2000s to nearly 5 million today.