Current:Home > MyTrump throws Truth Social under the bus in panicked embrace of X and Elon Musk -Golden Summit Finance
Trump throws Truth Social under the bus in panicked embrace of X and Elon Musk
View
Date:2025-04-15 18:44:20
Investors holding stock in Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. can't say they weren't warned that this would happen.
Donald Trump, the former one-term president evicted from the White House after losing the 2020 election, used that company to launch his social media website Truth Social in 2022 after another website formerly known as Twitter banned him in 2021 for his failed effort to overturn a free and fair election.
Elon Musk, the only person on the planet more thirsty for attention than Trump, overturned that ban after he bought Twitter and reshaped it into the disinformation carnival now known as X.
Trump, who had not posted on the website for nearly a year, returned with a vengeance Monday in a flurry of new posts and then a two-hour, glitch-marred ramble fest with Musk that broke no new ground and left the audience with a collective feeling of "what did we just listen to?"
If Truth Social's stock price was a metric for reviewing all that, then Trump seemingly tanked his own company with his return to X. Truth Social's stock, which has been a comical rollercoaster, hit its lowest point in four months during trading Tuesday.
The folks who run Truth Social for Trump always knew this day would come.
Truth Social's financial problems have been there this whole time
The warning has been broadcasted over and over in annual reports, quarterly reports and prospectuses that Truth Social files with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which regulates the stock market.
It was repeated last month in a Truth Social prospectus, which the SEC requires for companies to offer information to potential investors. The document noted that Trump's license agreement with Truth Social gives him "sole discretion" to post any "politically-related" information on any social media site, and that the company "lacks any meaningful remedy" if it disagrees with his decision, even though that could have "a material adverse effect on the business."
Let's translate that from Wall Street to Main Street: Trump can embrace a website with a much larger audience, like X, effectively rolling Truth Social under the campaign bus and if investors don't like that, well, tough luck.
Trump and Musk. LOL:Trump rambles, slurs his way through Elon Musk interview. It was an unmitigated disaster.
Trump will, however, free their pain. He owns nearly 115 million shares of Truth Social, making him the company's largest shareholder with a nearly 60% stake. When the stock takes a bath, Trump gets soaked in losses.
That's what makes Trump's embrace of X and Musk so much more interesting than the content of their mumbling marathon conversation on Monday.
Trump's panic over the election continues
Trump is panicked by the sudden inverse of attention in the race for president. Vice President Kamala Harris is soaking up the spotlight while Trump fumbles along, trying to regain center stage as the star attraction.
Let's pause here to note that while Harris' campaign for president is just 24 days old, launching last month after President Joe Biden dropped his bid for a second term, she has spent most of the past three weeks on stages reading from a teleprompter.
Trump, who launched his bid for a second term in November 2022, waited nearly 21 months before he held a traditional campaign news conference last week. Now Trump and his campaign attack Harris several times a day for not doing the same, with no regard to how long he took to take questions.
RFK Jr. is still a thing:Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s campaign is imploding. He can still be an electoral problem for Trump.
Trump's panic is fueled by the series of political bumps that have helped Harris surge in polling, from her campaign launch to naming Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate to a series of rallies in packed arenas.
She will surely see another bump from next week's Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
Harris, if she is up to it, could squeeze in yet another bump by calling a news conference before the convention starts and answering questions for an hour or so. Trump's attempt at that last Thursday was a predictable torrent of lies and grievances. His X-mess with Musk was more of the same.
Harris ‒ again, if she is up to it ‒ could seize the stature of being presidential just by responding to questions with reasonable answers.
Remember when Trump and Musk weren't friends?
Trump's return to X follows his standard transactional approach to everything in life.
Musk in 2022 posted on X that Trump was "too old" for a second term while praising Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, whose bid in the Republican primaries for president capsized and sank in January.
Trump's standard stump speech for more than a year has included mocking criticism of electric vehicles, like the kind Musk manufactures with his company, Tesla.
Then Musk created a super PAC to support the Trump campaign (while denying reports that he would sink $45 million per month of his own money into the effort). That was enough to prompt Trump to change up his stump speech last week, now offering faint praise for electric vehicles, based entirely on Musk's support.
As for Truth Social, the website didn't come up in Musk's chat with Trump. Maybe the ex-president didn't want to dwell on his losses, because Truth Social in a report filed Friday with the SEC said it lost more than $16 million in the second quarter of this year and brought in just $837,000 in revenue.
Trump on Tuesday was back on Truth Social, claiming his chat with Musk was a big success while predictably complaining about how it was covered in news reports. He didn't have any assurances to offer his investors. His thoughts were only of X and how that platform might boost his campaign.
Investors can't claim to be surprised. They were well warned about Trump.
Follow USA TODAY elections columnist Chris Brennan on X, formerly known as Twitter: @ByChrisBrennan
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- After 19 years, the Tuohys say they plan to terminate Michael Oher's conservatorship
- What Jessica Simpson and Nick Lachey's Marriage Was Like on Newlyweds—and in Real Life
- AP Week in Pictures: Global | Aug 11 - Aug. 18, 2023
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- 'We're not waiting': Maui community shows distrust in government following deadly wildfires
- A neonatal nurse in a British hospital has been found guilty of killing 7 babies
- Metals, government debt, and a climate lawsuit
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Hurricane Hilary threatens dangerous rain for Mexico’s Baja. California may get rare tropical storm
Ranking
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Legendary Sabres broadcaster Rick Jeanneret dies at 81
- Hormel sends 5 truckloads of Spam, a popular favorite in Hawaii, after Maui fires
- Khadijah Haqq and Bobby McCray Break Up After 13 Years of Marriage
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- 'Motivated by insatiable greed': Miami real estate agent who used PPP funds on Bentley sentenced
- Tornado spotted in Rhode Island as thunderstorms move through New England
- Stem cells from one eye show promise in healing injuries in the other
Recommendation
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
After 19 years, the Tuohys say they plan to terminate Michael Oher's conservatorship
Maryland reports locally acquired malaria case for first time in more than 40 years
Australian home declared safe after radioactive material discovered
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
Judge won’t delay Trump’s defamation claims trial, calling the ex-president’s appeal frivolous
Hilary could be the first tropical storm to hit California in more than 80 years
Rail whistleblowers fired for voicing safety concerns despite efforts to end practice of retaliation