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‘He can save trillions’

At a rally in Walker, Michigan, on Sept. 27, Trump unveiled his plan to enlist Musk to tackle the issue.

“I’m going to get Elon, and he’s great at this, he’s going to be our cost-cutter. I think he can save trillions,” Trump told an energized crowd.

However, Trump acknowledged that Musk is juggling numerous responsibilities and likely won't be available for the role full-time.

“I don’t think I can get him full-time because he’s a little bit busy sending rockets up and all the things he does. But he’s so much into that, he said the waste in this country is crazy,” Trump added.

Musk is, indeed, a man of many ventures. Beyond leading Tesla, he’s the founder, CEO, and chief engineer of SpaceX, which designs, manufactures, and launches rockets and spacecraft. Musk also co-founded Neuralink, a company developing implantable brain-machine interfaces.

And Trump doesn’t plan to pay Musk for his efforts — which, with a net worth of $270 billion, Musk probably doesn’t need.

“He’s going to do it for zero. He doesn’t want anything,” Trump declared.

Musk endorsed Trump for president on July 13, following a failed assassination attempt on the former President at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

When Trump later rolled out his economic proposals in September—including a government efficiency commission to be led by Musk — the Tesla CEO expressed his willingness to take on the role.

“I look forward to serving America if the opportunity arises. No pay, no title, no recognition is needed,” Musk wrote in a post on X.

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‘Once in a lifetime’ opportunity

Musk likened the U.S. to “a person at scale that has racked up too much credit card debt,” cautioning that the situation does not end well and the country needs to reduce its spending.

This growing fiscal crisis is one reason Musk has thrown his support behind Trump.

“If Trump wins … we do have an opportunity to do kind of a once in a lifetime deregulation and reduction in the size of government,” Musk stated.

And Musk is no stranger to downsizing.

When he acquired Twitter (now X) in 2022, the company had around 7,800 employees. By 2023, Musk revealed in a BBC interview that the workforce had been cut to just 1,500 — a staggering 80% reduction.

Musk admitted that letting go of so many people was “painful.”

However, Trump believes this time could be different. Speaking about Musk’s potential role as a “cost-cutter” in his administration, Trump remarked, “It’s going to be incredible, what he’ll be able to do, without hurting anybody — just waste. It’s waste, fraud and abuse … you get rid of that, everybody lives much better, we have a country that’s really strong again.”

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Jing Pan Investment Reporter

Jing is an investment reporter for MoneyWise. He is an avid advocate of investing for passive income. Despite the ups and downs he’s been through with the markets, Jing believes that you can generate a steadily increasing income stream by investing in high quality companies.

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