Emmanuel Macron mocks Elon Musk's subsidies

Emmanuel Macron described Elon Musk as a 'heavily subsidized guy' by the US federal government in a speech in Antwerp, Belgium, to advocate for European public investments. The billionaire countered on X, claiming his European competitors receive more public funding. This exchange highlights debates on financing industrial innovation.

In front of European industrialists in Antwerp, Belgium, French President Emmanuel Macron pleaded on Wednesday for a 'European preference' and massive investments in future sectors, funded notably by joint EU borrowing.

He illustrated his point by citing Elon Musk, founder of SpaceX and Tesla. 'Everyone is fascinated by Starlink, but if we're clear-eyed, Mr. Musk is probably one of the people in the world who has pocketed the most billions of dollars from American taxpayers,' Macron stated. He added: 'Elon Musk is above all a heavily subsidized guy' by the federal government for his Starlink satellite system.

Macron highlighted that the US combines private and public capital, especially in energy and space. 'Good news, it made him super innovative. And he became competitive thanks to this American approach,' he emphasized, urging Europe to follow suit to compete with the US and China.

Elon Musk responded quickly on his social network X. He claimed that 'the most subsidized are his competitors, especially in Europe.' According to him, 'if you add up all the public funding ever received by Tesla and SpaceX, it represents only about 1% of the cumulative value of these companies.' In contrast, for major American and European aerospace companies, 'the public money they have received exceeds 100% of their value,' he estimated.

This episode fits into a broader context of tensions over regulating tech giants and European competitiveness.

Relaterade artiklar

Illustration of Trump at Davos claiming to force French drug price hikes, denied by Élysée Palace amid trade tensions.
Bild genererad av AI

Élysée denies Trump’s claims on forcing drug price hikes in France

Rapporterad av AI Bild genererad av AI

In his speech at the Davos Forum on January 21, 2026, Donald Trump claimed he forced Emmanuel Macron to raise drug prices in France under threat of tariffs. The Élysée immediately denied these statements, noting that prices are set by Social Security and have remained stable. This controversy highlights transatlantic tensions over trade issues.

USA har varnat för restriktioner mot stora tjänsteleverantörer i EU som vedergällning för EU:s techregleringar som riktar sig mot amerikanska bolag. Denna eskalering följer en böter på 140 miljoner dollar mot Elon Musks X enligt EU:s Digitala tjänstelag, vilket dragit skarp kritik från Trump-administrationen. Europeiska tjänstemän hävdar att deras regler säkerställer en rättvis spelplan för alla företag.

Rapporterad av AI

At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Emmanuel Macron sharply criticized Donald Trump's methods, urging Europeans to assert their autonomy. The US president responded with mockery about the Frenchman's sunglasses. This exchange highlights growing transatlantic tensions.

I en videointervju med Giga Berlin-anläggningens chef André Thierig detaljerade Tesla-vd:n Elon Musk utbyggnader inklusive batteriproduktion, Cybercab-robotaxier, Semi-lastbilar och Optimus-robotar – men varnade för att planerna beror på att fabriken undviker IG Metalls inflytande i kommande personalrådsval, mitt i produktionsfall och sjunkande europeiska försäljning. Han försäkrade att anläggningen inte kommer att stängas.

Rapporterad av AI

On March 2, 2026, French President Emmanuel Macron spoke at the Île Longue naval base near Brest, unveiling 'advanced deterrence' to associate eight European countries with France's nuclear strategy amid Russian threats and US NATO commitment doubts. He ordered an increase in nuclear warheads—currently estimated at 290—funded via a military programming law update adding 36 billion euros, while naming the next nuclear submarine 'L'Invincible'. This initiative preserves French sovereignty without sharing weapons or firing decisions.

French President Emmanuel Macron has criticized social media platforms, calling unrestricted free speech 'pure bulls***t' without transparent algorithms. He warned of serious democratic risks from opaque digital systems.

Rapporterad av AI Faktagranskad

The European Commission has imposed a fine of €120 million (about $140 million) on X for breaching transparency rules under the Digital Services Act, citing deceptive use of blue checkmarks, ad transparency failures and limits on researcher access to data. Elon Musk, who bought the platform in 2022, has framed the move as an attack on free speech while pointing to a surge in downloads across Europe.

 

 

 

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj