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Musk vs the World

10 January 2025
| by Field Team

Elon Musk, the world's richest man, has set his sights on UK politics, leaving a trail of controversy in his wake.

From his critiques of Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Lib Dem leader Ed Davey to his outspoken comments on the grooming gang inquiry, Musk's interventions are making waves across the media. He has called for King Charles to dissolve Parliament, insisted the far-right agitator Tommy Robinson should be released from his jail sentence for contempt of court and let it be known he supports “removing” the Prime Minister before the next election.


All this is doubling down on his self-appointed role as a disruptor, challenging the establishment and reshaping discourse in Westminster and beyond. But will it have an impact? Polls show Musk is personally deeply unpopular amongst UK voters but it hasn’t stopped Nigel Farage and Reform UK’s billionaire treasurer, Nick Candy, meeting him at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home in Florida.


While their alliance has quickly soured after Musk criticised Farage as “too focused on headlines and not solutions”, it’s clear there is a brand of politics here breaking out of the online arena and into the mainstream, amid a slow but steady surge in Reform’s poll ratings.


It’s also not just the UK. Musk has criticised French President Emmanuel Macron and stirred controversy in Germany by endorsing the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), a party labelled “suspected of extremism” by German courts. Now, the UK is under his spotlight, for better or worse.


Whatever the outcome at the ballot box in the years to come, with the UK government seemingly reluctant to challenge his influence, Musk’s rhetoric is already amplifying fringe voices and eroding public trust.

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