On Musk
James Billot
“Musk is a parasitic illegal
immigrant. He wants to impose his freak experiments and play-act as God without
any respect for the country’s history, values, or traditions.” Steve Bannon
doesn’t hold back when I meet him in the basement of his Washington townhouse.
The triple-shirted architect
of old-school Trumpian populism, briefly a White House advisor during Donald
Trump’s first term, has emerged as the counterpole to Elon Musk, whose
ultra-libertarian agenda has come to dominate the President’s second term. To
Bannon, the billionaire X owner is more forceful and, perhaps, more dangerous
than any figure on the Left. “Musk is the one with power at the moment,” he
says. “The Democrats are nowhere to be seen.”
Less than a month into the
Trump presidency, Musk has established himself as a core fixture in the White
House. He holds news conferences in the Oval Office with his four-year-old;
hosts foreign leaders in meetings that strikingly resemble head-of-state bilaterals;
enjoys access to virtually every federal department; and, most importantly, has
the ear of the President.
Bannon, meanwhile, must settle
for a microphone. The 71-year-old’s War Room podcast beams out
to hundreds of thousands of MAGA ultras six days a week — despite being purged
from platforms including Spotify. In his studio, stacks of old Financial
Times papers, archival documents and recording equipment are strewn
across the table, overlooked by countless religious icons and memorabilia. “We
have not yet begun to FIGHT,” reads one sign on his mantelpiece, beside a
wooden crucifix labelled “full armor of God”. Top of his agenda: a third Trump
term.
Comments
Post a Comment