


One big thing Donald Trump and Elon Musk have in common
They both want to crush Tesla’s competition
Summoning a giant flaming rocket safely home from the edge of space is pretty cool, but Elon Musk’s success in yanking the infamously inertial American car industry in a new direction still ranks among his most impressive achievements. Believing that a transition to sustainable energy was essential to preserving humanity, Mr Musk set out to make Tesla “a guiding light” that would lead other automakers to electrify their cars years before they might have otherwise. The strategy began working almost right away. In 2009, the year after Tesla delivered its first production car, the Roadster, Bob Lutz, a General Motors vice-chairman and a convert to electrification, called Tesla “the crowbar that helped break up the logjam”.
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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Battery flattery”

Vital election races in Wisconsin are awfully close
America’s dairyland is giving Democrats some heartburn

Brandon Johnson is giving Chicago’s teachers’ union everything
It may well cost him his political career

Voters won’t thank Kamala Harris for the state of the economy
Why voters are down on America’s remarkable economy
Republicans ramp up efforts to court Amish voters in Pennsylvania
Where mail-in ballots could matter most
Democrats struggle to limit the loss of black voters in Georgia
Kamala Harris’s campaign has good reason to feel jittery
Why Larry Hogan’s long-odds bid for a Senate seat matters
He offers conservatives a pragmatic path beyond Trumpism