


Elon Musk threatens to widen the rift between Europe and America
Musk is from Mars, Europe is from Venus
A peace of convenience usually reigns between politicians and corporate chieftains. Politicos go easy on businessfolk from whom they hope to secure investments and campaign contributions, while the bosses hold their tongues in the hope of securing subsidies and permits that are in politicians’ gift. How refreshing it is to see both sides go at each other once in a while. No brawl has been quite so public in recent times as that pitting Elon Musk against politicians in Europe, often unfolding on X (or Twitter, as the social network was known until he bought it two years ago). Just last week the purveyor of Tesla cars and SpaceX rockets called the German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, a “fool”; earlier this year he advised a European Union commissioner who had crossed him to “Take a big step back and literally, fuck your own face!” The other side can give nearly as good as it gets. Another EU commissioner last month painted the mercurial Mr Musk as a “promoter of evil”, before the French foreign minister on November 9th mocked him for running X into the ground. Zing!
Explore more
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Elon is from Mars, Europe is from Venus”

Germany election 2025 tracker: who’s ahead in the polls?
Follow the latest odds for which parties may form the next government

Firing American missiles at Russia won’t change Ukraine’s fortunes
But Joe Biden wants to send North Korea a message

Ukraine’s secret army in France
A new force is being marshalled to take on the Kremlin’s men
How older French women are redefining the aesthetics of ageing
Wrinkles could once wreck a public career in France. Not any more
Italy’s oddest political party is splitting
Six years ago it was Italy’s biggest
The war in Ukraine has rattled both sides of Cyprus
Russians and Ukrainians have both used the island as a banking haven: not so easy now