Elon Musk helped Trump win. Now he's looking at Europe, and many 
		politicians are alarmed
		
		 
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		 [January 08, 2025]  
		By JILL LAWLESS 
		
		LONDON (AP) — Fresh from pouring his money and energies into helping 
		Donald Trump win reelection, Elon Musk has trained his sights on Europe, 
		setting off alarm bells among politicians across the continent. 
		 
		The Tesla and SpaceX chief executive has endorsed the far-right 
		Alternative for Germany, demanded the release of jailed U.K. anti-Islam 
		extremist Tommy Robinson and called British Prime Minister Keir Starmer 
		an evil tyrant who should be in prison. 
		 
		Many European politicians have been left concerned by the attention. 
		Musk’s feed on his social network X is dotted with abusive language — 
		labeling politicians “stupid cretin” and “sniveling cowards” — as well 
		as retweets of far-right and anti-immigrant accounts. 
		 
		Andrew Chadwick, professor of political communication at Loughborough 
		University, said Musk is using X “a bit like an old-style newspaper 
		mogul,” to promulgate his political views. 
		 
		“We’ve seen Musk start to align himself much more obviously with an 
		international movement of the far right,” Chadwick said. ”If you look at 
		the kinds of people who Musk himself is boosting on his platform … he’s 
		increasingly started to assemble a group of different right-wing 
		influencers, many of them with large followings, and presenting their 
		evidence as a basis for his interventions into European politics.” 
		 
		Musk has inserted himself into politics in Germany, which is headed for 
		a Feb. 23 election after center-left Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s fractious 
		three-party coalition government collapsed. 
		
		  
		
		On Dec. 20, Musk wrote on X: “Only the AfD can save Germany,” a 
		reference to the Alternative for Germany party, which is under 
		observation by the domestic intelligence agency for suspected extremism. 
		 
		He doubled down on support for the AfD in an article for the Welt am 
		Sonntag newspaper, claiming Germany is “teetering on the edge of 
		economic and cultural collapse.” Later this week Musk is due to hold a 
		live chat on X with AfD co-leader Alice Weidel. 
		 
		Scholz’s response embodies the dilemma faced by European politicians — 
		should they ignore and let Musk’s comments go unchallenged, or engage 
		and risk amplifying them? 
		 
		Scholz has said it’s important to “stay cool” over personal attacks, but 
		called Musk’s involvement in German politics worrying. In a new year 
		message, Scholz pointedly noted that Germany’s way forward “will not be 
		decided by the owners of social media channels” but by German voters. 
		 
		French President Emmanuel Macron warned Monday about the risks posed by 
		unchecked power in the hands of tech billionaires and the destabilizing 
		impact they could have on democratic institutions. 
		 
		“Who could have imagined, 10 years ago, that the owner of one of the 
		world’s largest social networks would intervene directly in elections, 
		including in Germany?” Macron said. 
		 
		Greek Health Minister Adonis Georgiadis said Musk’s behavior was 
		“troubling and far from amusing.” 
		 
		“Someone cannot simply use their platform, wealth and connections to try 
		to dictate how governments are formed in each nation,” he told 
		Parapolitika Radio. “This is becoming increasingly dangerous.” 
		 
		Musk has increasingly focused on British politics since the center-left 
		Labour Party was elected in July, calling Starmer an “evil” leader 
		presiding over a “tyrannical police state.” 
		 
		Musk’s recent focus is on child sexual abuse, particularly a series of 
		cases that rocked northern England towns several years ago, in which 
		groups of men, largely from Pakistani backgrounds, were tried for 
		grooming and abusing dozens of mostly white girls. The cases have been 
		used by far-right activists to link child abuse to immigration and 
		Islam. 
		 
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            Elon Musk speaks before Republican presidential nominee former 
			President Donald Trump at a campaign rally at Madison Square Garden 
			on Oct. 27, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File) 
            
			
			
			  
            Musk has accused Starmer of failing to bring perpetrators to justice 
			when he was England’s director of public prosecutions between 2008 
			and 2013 — a charge Starmer strongly denies. 
			 
			“Starmer must go and he must face charges for his complicity in the 
			worst mass crime in the history of Britain,” Musk tweeted. 
			 
			Chadwick said “there’s been a hesitancy on the part of the political 
			elite in the U.K. to engage” with Musk’s “incredibly inflammatory 
			remarks.” But Starmer changed tack Monday, condemning “lies and 
			misinformation” and accusing U.K. Conservative politicians who have 
			echoed some of Musk’s points of “amplifying what the far right are 
			saying.” 
			 
			“I enjoy the cut and thrust of politics, the robust debate that we 
			must have, but that’s got to be based on facts and truth, not on 
			lies,” the prime minister said. 
			 
			Starmer is facing calls to tighten Britain’s laws on foreign 
			interference, and governments around the world are under pressure to 
			leave X. Both the U.K. and German governments say they have no plans 
			to quit the platform. 
			 
			Musk’s X is under investigation by European authorities attempting 
			to curb hatred, disinformation and other toxic content on social 
			media. The European Union has launched infringement proceedings 
			against X under the bloc’s Digital Services Act, and EU spokesman 
			Thomas Regnier said it will look at whether Musk's livestream 
			interview Thursday with the AfD's Weidel gives inappropriate 
			“preferential treatment” to the party during a preelection period. 
			 
			Musk, a self-styled free-speech advocate, is critical of efforts to 
			regulate social media. He has compared British attempts to weed out 
			online misinformation through the Online Safety Act to censorship in 
			the Soviet Union. 
			 
			Musk clearly enjoys baiting mainstream politicians on social media, 
			but Chadwick said it “remains to be seen” whether his posting 
			changes public attitudes or helps the causes he champions. 
			 
			And the political interventions carry risk for him. His comments are 
			being watched closely by Tesla investors for signs he could be 
			turning off car buyers who don’t agree with his politics. 
			 
			Tesla is already struggling in Europe, where new registrations for 
			Musk’s electronic vehicles fell 13% in the first nine months of 
			2023, according to auto researcher Jato Dynamics. In Germany, Tesla 
			registrations dropped 44%. 
            
			  
			Jato senior analyst Felipe Munoz said that Musk's outspokenness is 
			rare and risky for the owner of a publicly traded company — though 
			it may pay off in the end. 
			 
			“Europe is going to (the) right,” he said, pointing to politicians 
			including France’s Marine Le Pen and Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni. 
			 
			“Look at what happened in the U.S. His bet on Trump worked. He is 
			playing the same game in Europe.” 
			 
			___ 
			 
			Geir Moulson in Berlin; Sylvie Corbet in Paris; Raf Casert in 
			Brussels; Derek Gatopoulos in Athens, Greece; and Bernard Condon in 
			New York contributed to this story. 
			
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