South African immigrant and unelected megalomaniac attacks world democracies
Pushes fascism in U.S., Britain, Germany, Canada and Italy
Robert Reich in Inequality Media
Elon Musk repeatedly asserts, without evidence, that British Prime Minister Keir Starmer covered up the abuses of young girls by gangs comprised largely of British Pakistani men, in cases that date back to before 2010 when Starmer was head of Britain’s public prosecutions.“Starmer was complicit in the RAPE OF BRITAIN when he was
head of Crown Prosecution for six years,” Musk posted to the top of his account
on Friday. “Starmer must go, and he must face charges for his complicity in the
worst mass crime in the history of Britain.”
In fact, Starmer, who heads the Labour government, did not cover
up abuses. Instead, he brought the first case against an Asian grooming gang
and drafted new guidelines for how the Crown Prosecution Service should deal
with cases of sexual exploitation of children, including the mandatory
reporting of child sex offenses.
Musk also calls Jess Phillips, the Labour government’s under secretary for safeguarding and violence against women and girls, a “rape genocide apologist” because she pushed back on calls for a national inquiry into child sexual exploitation in Oldham, a town near Manchester.
In fact, Phillips, who has long campaigned for women’s
rights, has called for a local investigation by Oldham authorities rather than
the central government. Women’s rights supporters say Musk’s labeling Phillips
a “rape genocide apologist” is threatening her safety.
Starmer warned publicly
that Musk’s baseless accusations “crossed a line,” adding that “once we lose
the anchor that truth matters, in the robust debate that we must have, then we
are on a very slippery slope.”
Musk’s Global Reach
Musk’s lies about the left-wing British government and his
support for far-right groups are parts of an emerging pattern. Musk is also:
- Boosting the far-right
party in Germany with neo-Nazi ties, known as
Alternative for Germany (AfD), before elections early next month. Musk
signaled his support for AfD in mid-December, writing in a post on X that “only
the AfD can save Germany.” He also penned an op-ed in a German newspaper
recently, describing the party as the “last spark of hope” for the
country. Musk is planning an online “discussion” on X with the AfD’s
leader and candidate for chancellor, Alice Weidel, amplifying the party’s
neo-Nazi ideology.
- Attacking the
Italian judiciary for curbing Italian Prime Giorgia Meloni’s hardline
anti-asylum immigration policies. Musk has met regularly with
Meloni, who has called him a friend, and appeared at a youth event for
Meloni’s party.
- Urging support for Britain’s far-right
MP Nigel Farage’s anti-immigration Reform U.K. Party. Musk says
he might donate upward of 100
million pounds ($127 million) to Farage’s group.
- Demanding Britain “free
Tommy Robinson,” the far-right founder of the English Defence
League—an Islamophobic nationalist group—and anti-immigrant agitator who,
Musk charges, is in jail for “telling the truth.” In fact,
Robinson is in jail because he was found to have defamed a teenage Syrian
refugee and then defied a British court order by repeating the false
claims. (Robinson has been previously jailed for assault, mortgage fraud,
and traveling on a false passport to the United States, where he has
sought to establish ties with right-wing groups.)
- Allowing
on X inflammatory lies of a kind that incited anti-immigrant riots in
Britain last July, following the killing of three girls in a mass
stabbing in the town of Southport. After Britain arrested more than 30
people, Musk condemned the government for what he called an attack on free
speech.
- Calling
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau an “insufferable tool” over
comments Trudeau made in support of U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, and predicted he “won’t
be in power for much longer.” (Yesterday, Trudeau announced he will
resign.)
Where Musk Is Getting This Power
As the richest person in the world, politicians everywhere
now recognize his capacity to pour money into their parties and political
campaigns, as he did by investing a quarter of a billion dollars to get Trump
elected.
He also owns X, formerly Twitter, which (as of December
2024) has 619 million monthly active users. He has manipulated X’s algorithm to
boost his own posts, which now reach 210 million.
But Musk’s real power these days comes from his proximity to
and presumed influence over Donald Trump, soon to be President of the United
States.
Musk has hardly left Trump’s side since the election,
meaning that Musk’s opinions (amplified by his social media platform) cannot
be ignored by politicians around the world who are trying to decipher Trump’s
opinions.
One prominent member of Germany’s center-left Social
Democratic Party is asking that Germany determine “whether [Musk’s] repeated
disrespect, defamation, and interference in the election campaign were also
expressed in the name of the new U.S. government.”
This combination—the richest person in the world, owner and
manipulator of the biggest political messaging platform in the world, with
direct influence over Trump—puts Musk in the position of being able to move
other nations toward the neo-fascist right.
Why Musk Is Doing This
Not for money. As it is, he has far more than any human can
utilize.
Partly, it’s ideological. He calls himself a “free speech
absolutist,” which puts him at odds with Europe’s and Canada’s aggressive
responses to hate speech online. (Britain, Musk says, “is turning into a police
state.”)
But the roots of Musk’s neo-fascism probably go deeper.
I am no psychoanalyst, but I imagine that as an immigrant
from South Africa, Musk is especially triggered by poor people of color moving
into white nations. His father smuggled raw emeralds and had them cut in
Johannesburg.
Part of his shift to the radical right also comes from
Musk’s transgender child. As Musk told conservative
commentator Jordan Peterson, “I lost my son, essentially,” claiming she was
“dead, killed by the woke mind virus. I vowed to destroy the woke mind virus
after that.” (Musk’s daughter, Vivian Jenna Wilson, now 20, told NBC News that
Musk was an absent father who was cruel to her as a child for being queer and
feminine.)
On X, Musk continuously criticizes transgender rights, including medical treatments for trans-identifying minors, and the use of pronouns if they are different from what would be used at birth. He has promoted anti-trans content and called for arresting people who provide trans care to minors.
Last July, Musk said he was pulling his
businesses out of California to protest a new state law that bars schools from
requiring that trans kids be outed to their parents. After Musk bought X, then
known as Twitter, in 2022, he rolled back the app’s protections for trans
people, including a ban on using birth names (known as “deadnames” for
transgender people).
Perhaps the major reason for Musk’s recent effort to push
other nations to the neo-fascist right is his newfound thirst for right-wing
global politics. After effectively (at least in Musk’s mind) winning the
presidency for Trump by spending more than $250 million and unleashing a
maelstrom of pro-Trump and anti-Harris lies over X, he now seeks even more of
an authoritarian rush.
It will not be the first time in history that someone is
seduced by the thrill of unconstrained power, although it may be the first time
that so much of it is concentrated in one unelected megalomaniac.
What Should Be Done About Musk?
For the time being, particularly under Trump, there is
little that we in America can do to constrain Musk except by boycotting Tesla
and X.
Canada and Britain and other European nations, meanwhile,
should, at the very least:
- Enact
laws and regulations to prohibit non-citizens (like Musk) from financing
activities that could affect their elections.
- Maintain,
if not strengthen, laws and rules against hate speech, and ensure that
they are applied to social media companies, such as Musk’s X.
- Refuse
to contract with Musk’s Space X and its Starlink satellite division, or
with Musk’s other corporations (Tesla and the Boring Company).
- Disengage
from any joint ventures or technology transfers involving Musk, including
xAI, his artificial intelligence company.
© 2025 Robert Reich
Robert Reich is the Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and a senior fellow at the Blum Center for Developing Economies. He served as secretary of labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time magazine named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the twentieth century. His book include: "Aftershock" (2011), "The Work of Nations" (1992), "Beyond Outrage" (2012) and, "Saving Capitalism" (2016). He is also a founding editor of The American Prospect magazine, former chairman of Common Cause, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning documentary, "Inequality For All." Reich's newest book is "The Common Good" (2019). He's co-creator of the Netflix original documentary "Saving Capitalism," which is streaming now.