How the slash-and-burn tactics Musk brought to Washington backfired at
Twitter
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[February 08, 2025] By
MATT O'BRIEN and BERNARD CONDON
When Elon Musk bought Twitter in 2022, he laid off thousands of
employees, stopped paying rent and auctioned off coffee makers and
office chairs in hopes of a big turnaround.
Now the world’s richest man has brought the same slash-and-burn strategy
to the federal government, and some people who experienced Musk's
takeover at Twitter have a warning: Expect chaos, cuts driven by
ideology as much as by cost concerns, intimidation and plenty of
lawsuits.
Since assuming leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency,
Musk has consolidated control over large swaths of the government with
President Donald Trump ’s blessing, sidelined career officials, gained
access to sensitive databases and invited a constitutional clash over
the limits of presidential authority.
Emily Horne, who was head of Twitter’s policy communications before
joining the Biden administration, describes Musk’s modus operandi as:
“Take it over, ruthlessly purge anyone who he sees as opposition and
crash operations to remake it in his worldview.”
It's unclear whether his push for “extremely hardcore” changes at
Twitter has paid off. Revenue at the company now called X has plunged,
the number of users has dwindled and even Musk himself has expressed
frustration at how long it is taking to turn around the company's
finances.
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“It isn’t working,” said Ross Gerber, a minority stockholder at X who
has written down his stake to zero and expects Musk to fail in
Washington, too. “The federal government is going to eat him up and spit
him out.”
By some measures, X is still a success. The platform continues to
attract hundreds of millions of users worldwide and has cemented Musk's
political influence. But exactly how it is faring financially is
difficult to say because the company is private.
The same week that Musk’s teams at DOGE were threatening to lay off tens
of thousands of federal workers, bankers who loaned him billions of
dollars to buy Twitter were bracing for losses and trying to unload the
loans on others. Musk has apparently given up hope of attracting key
advertisers back to the platform and has sued some of them.
Examples of budget-minded business leaders who brought their skills to
government work abound, but Musk made clear — at both Twitter and DOGE —
that his priorities go beyond efficiency into rooting out a “woke”
agenda.
Long before fighting diversity, equity and inclusion efforts became a
centerpiece of Trump’s third presidential campaign, Musk eliminated
Twitter’s DEI initiatives and the people administering them.
“The culture of Twitter died,” said former employee Theodora Skeadas,
whose job was cut in the weeks after Musk bought Twitter for $44 billion
in October 2022. “For a lot of these agencies and organizations, that
may be in their future.”
Another tactic that Musk appears to be bringing to the government:
“performances of loyalty.”
That is how former Twitter executive Rumman Chowdhury describes Musk's
drive to make workers prove the value of their work in a way she says
demonstrated fealty. For instance, engineers were told to print out code
then line up to have an inexperienced engineer evaluate it.
“It's a fear and intimidation tactic,” Chowdhury said. “I don’t know if
it’s the best leadership style long term, as demonstrated by how abysmal
Twitter/X is doing.”
Musk later sought to rehire some of the engineers he fired. His instinct
to threaten also backfired with advertisers.
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Within months of Musk’s takeover, advertising revenue plunged by half as
brands fled X over fears he was loosening content moderation too much.
But instead of courting the companies, Musk took to X threatening to
“thermonuclear name & shame” them for leaving his platform. Later at a
conference, he used an expletive and urged them, “Don’t advertise.”
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Elon Musk speaks at a presidential inauguration event on behalf of
President-elect Donald Trump in Washington, Jan. 20, 2025. (AP
Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
 “Talk about shooting yourself in the
foot,” said ad consultant Tom Hespos of Abydos Media, who told his
clients at that point to avoid even posting on X because it could
damage their brand. “That is probably the worst comment he could
have made.”
In August, Musk doubled down by suing Unilever, Mars, CVS Health and
several other companies that had dropped Twitter, accusing them of
engaging in an “illegal boycott.” On Saturday, he added more
companies to the lawsuit, including Lego, Shell International, Tyson
Foods, Nestle and Colgate-Palmolive.
His drawn-out legal battles with more than 2,000 former Twitter
workers are also a sign of the kind of court fights that could await
the government. A federal judge on Thursday put on hold a midnight
deadline the same day for government workers to accept Musk's
“deferred resignation offer” promising pay through September without
having to work.
The email announcing the offer was titled “Fork in the Road,”
echoing a similar email Musk sent to the Twitter workforce in 2022.
More than two years later, Musk's X is still “spending an insane
amount of money” defending against allegations by former Twitter
employees that they are owed money, said lawyer Shannon Liss-Riordan,
who represents hundreds of the workers. She said it would have been
cheaper just to pay them what they were owed.
“If that is the way decision making is being made for the federal
government, I’m very concerned about the finances of the federal
government,” she said.
Neither X nor DOGE responded to requests for comment from The
Associated Press.
Along with gutting the company’s workforce and auctioning off
memorabilia and office furniture, Musk’s extreme cost-cutting
strategy at Twitter included simply not paying its bills. Landlords
of the social media company’s headquarters in San Francisco as well
as its British offices took the company to court for millions of
dollars in unpaid rent.
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The British case settled for an undisclosed sum. The San Francisco
case was dismissed last year; it’s not clear if a settlement was
paid.
Musk has also brought one of X's real estate executives over to the
government.
Even if the X cuts were an unmitigated success, it’s unclear whether
the same tactics would work for cutting costs and still delivering
services at government agencies.
Nicholas Bagley, a law professor at the University of Michigan, said
Musk and Trump are arrogating spending power that belongs to
Congress, not the executive branch, and he predicts lawsuits over
the moves will hamstring their efforts.
“All this is of dubious legality, and that’s before you get to the
civil service protections,” Bagley said, referring to federal
workforce rules preventing layoffs for political purposes. “You’re
going to see a lot of bombast and rhetoric, but I suspect it’s going
to yield fewer things on the ground.”
A few in Musk's orbit have tried to warn him against moving too
rashly, including prominent tech investor Paul Graham, who in a
recent X exchange asked Musk to “take your time and do it
carefully.”
The government "isn’t just a company. Companies are born and die
within the system, and it’s OK. But this is the system itself we’re
talking about here.”
Minority X stock owner Gerber, CEO of investment firm Gerber
Kawasaki, praises Musk for instilling a sense of belonging to the
“special forces of business” at his companies. But he thinks Musk
will fail in Washington.
"The idea that you can fire all these people doesn’t work," he said.
“We're about to see an epic battle.”
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