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Elon Musk pitches himself for a public accounting committee in an interview with Donald Trump
Fortune · Joe Raedle

On Monday evening, Elon Musk interviewed former President Donald Trump on X.

The interview was initially delayed by technical difficulties. Once it started it became a wide-ranging interview the two discussed last month's assassination attempt against Trump, immigration, foreign policy, and the economy. At points during the interview Trump gave meandering answers, many of which were riddled with falsehoods.

When discussing the economy Musk regularly spoke of the runaway government spending that he said led to inflation. Several times Musk pitched himself as a candidate to serve on a "government efficiency commission" that would examine public spending.

The commission in would "ensure that the taxpayer money, the taxpayers are hard earned money, is spent in a good way," Musk said. "And I'd be happy to help out on such a commission attempted to broach the subject with Trump, who often pivoted to his usual talking points about the cost of living."

Trump responded favorably, telling Musk he'd "love" to have him on such a committee. The federal government spent $6.13 trillion in fiscal year 2022.

Musk went on to say that excessive government regulation was another reason for persistent infation. "If you deregulate, like have sensible regulations, so because lot of the regulations are nonsensical and cause the cost to be extreme for no reason," Musk said.

Over the course of the interview Musk and Trump were rather chummy, joking and complimenting one another.

Musk only recently formally endorsed Trump, which he did immediately after the failed assassination attempt against him last month. Since then reports emerged that Musk was throwing his considerable financial weight behind the former president’s reelection campaign. The Musk-backed America PAC pledged millions in support of Trump. Musk is reportedly personally involved with parts of the PAC’s work, which includes an effort to turnout 800,000 low propensity voters in various battleground states, according to the Wall Street Journal. (Officials from North Carolina and Michigan are investigating the PAC over allegations it improperly collected voter data).

Prior to the last few years, Musk had a relatively little involvement in politics. Now, he stands as one of the standard bearers for Silicon Valley’s support of Trump. That in and of itself is somewhat surprising considering the tech industry was in the past considered a bastion of Democratic support. While it’s still overwhelmingly so, the emergence of prominent tech industry figures coming out in support of Trump is a somewhat new development. In addition to Musk, Trump’s tech supporters include a crop of venture capitalists like Marc Andreessen, Ben Horowitz, Peter Thiel, Doug Leone, and Palantir cofounder Joe Lonsdale.