Musk vows to unseat lawmakers who support Trump’s sweeping spending bill

A picture


Elon Musk has vowed to unseat lawmakers who support Donald Trump’s sweeping budget bill, which he has criticized because it would increase the country’s deficit by $3.3tn.“Every member of Congress who campaigned on reducing government spending and then immediately voted for the biggest debt increase in history should hang their head in shame! And they will lose their primary next year if it is the last thing I do on this Earth,” he wrote on his social media platform, X.A few hours later he added that if the “insane spending bill passes, the America Party will be formed the next day”.With these threats, lobbed at lawmakers over social media, the tech billionaire has launched himself back into a rift with the US president he helped prop up.

Since taking leave from his so-called “department of government efficiency”, or Doge, Musk has sharply criticized Trump’s budget bill, which he has said will undermine his work at Doge by increasing spending.Musk had been relatively quiet about the bill after his dramatic fallout with Trump, but re-entered the debate this weekend.The Tesla and SpaceX CEO called again for a new political party, saying the bill’s massive spending indicated “that we live in a one-party country – the PORKY PIG PARTY!!”“Time for a new political party that actually cares about the people,” he wrote.After contributing $277m to Trump’s political campaign, Musk became a vital part of the US president’s orbit and his administration.Doge, which oversaw abrupt and chaotic cuts to various government programs, claimed it saved $190bn.

But the effort may also have cost taxpayers $135bn, according to an analysis by the Partnership for Public Service (PSP), a non-partisan non-profit that focuses on the federal workforce.Musk and Trump were aligned in cutting social safety net programs, environmental and health initiatives and global aid programs.But Musk has railed against the president’s signature proposal.The Senate’s version of the bill would add nearly $3.3tn to the deficit over the next decade, according to a Congressional Budget Office estimate, whereas the House-approved bill would add $2.

4tn to the deficit over the next decade.Musk has expressed disdain for both versions.In addition to criticizing the bill’s spending provisions, he has bemoaned its slashing of subsidies for electric vehicles, saying that the bill “gives handouts to industries of the past while severely damaging industries of the future”.
cultureSee all
A picture

Andy Lee: ‘It’s illegal to taxidermy a human in Australia. I know because I looked into it’

You wrote your first kids’ book, Do Not Open This Book, on a 40-minute flight as a present for your nephew and you’ve now sold 3m books. Your sister Alex also writes kids’ books. How pissed off with you is she?Hahaha. Look, she should be. But fortunately for me, I have the most supportive siblings so she’s just thrilled for me

A picture

My cultural awakening: Buffy gave me the courage to escape my conservative Pakistani upbringing

I was 10, cross-legged on the floor of my parents’ living room in Newcastle, bathed in the blue light of a TV. The volume was set to near-silence – my dad, asleep in another room, had schizophrenia and frontal lobe syndrome, and I didn’t want to wake him. Then, like some divine interruption to the endless blur of news and repeats, I stumbled across Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The show may have been barely audible, but it hit me like a lightning bolt.Before Buffy, life was like a pressure cooker

A picture

Your front-row pass to who the performers will be watching at Glastonbury

Hello from Worthy Farm, home to Glastonbury festival! As is tradition, this newsletter is coming to you from a sparsely apportioned cabin behind the festival’s legendary Pyramid stage, which this weekend will feature headline sets from The 1975, Neil Young and Olivia Rodrigo.The festival proper is kicking off right about now, though really it has been whirring away for two days already. The official opening was on Wednesday night: a circus spectacular on the Pyramid stage featuring jugglers, drummers, fire-flinging dancers and a bloke doing handstands on a fairy-light-strewn bike suspended above the audience. The extravaganza came courtesy of the talented folk from Glastonbury’s theatre and circus fields, who were tasked with opening the festival for the first time since the early 90s.(Incidentally, the Theatre and Circus Fields have a pretty remarkable origin story: in 1971 Winston Churchill’s granddaughter Arabella was being relentlessly hounded by the paparazzi in London, having created a bit of a stink by daring to speak out against the Vietnam war

A picture

‘Joyous, immersive’ Beamish wins Art Fund museum of the year award

Beamish, the Living Museum of the North, has won the prestigious Art Fund museum of the year award, the largest such prize in the world.Awarding it the £120,000 prize, judges called Beamish a “joyous, immersive and unique place shaped by the stories and experiences of its community”.The open-air museum in County Durham, which is celebrating its 55th anniversary, brings north-east England’s Georgian, Edwardian, 1940s and 1950s history to life through immersive exhibits.Visitors engage with costumed staff and volunteers and experience regional stories of everyday life. The museum has a longstanding commitment to preserving local heritage

A picture

Seth Meyers on Trump’s new Nato nickname: ‘Why is anyone calling him daddy?’

Late-night hosts discussed Donald Trump’s belief that he should win a Nobel peace prize and the bizarre new name given to him by the Nato chief.On Late Night, Seth Meyers said that Trump’s insistence that he deserves the Nobel peace prize for inserting himself into the Iran-Israel conflict is “obviously insane” but “at best we can trick him” by offering him a “Babybel piece of cheese on a lanyard”.He added that “no president should get a Nobel peace prize” and played footage of Trump listing all of the things he has done that deserve one. “This idiot thinks it’s the Nathan’s hotdog contest,” he said.Meyers said that Trump is thirsty for praise “for stopping an illegal war he started” and is now “absolutely livid” that the ceasefire was violated

A picture

Stephen Colbert on Ice: ‘Constantly devising new terrible ways to treat immigrants’

Late-night hosts talked about US involvement in the Israel-Iran conflict and how the situation at home should be higher on the priority list.On The Late Show, Stephen Colbert spoke about the “tenuous ceasefire” that Donald Trump has been taking credit for after getting involved in the situation between Israel and Iran.The president’s controversial decision to bomb Iran has led some of his most ardent loyalists to claim he deserves the Nobel peace prize.Colbert said he is “not sure if they give an award for bombing people into submission” and anyway, they “kept bombing each other” despite an alleged ceasefire.The ongoing conflict led Trump to lose his cool with press, telling reporters that Israel and Iran “don’t know what the fuck they’re doing”