Hedge fund titan Bill Ackman and controversial rapper Kanye West both called for President Donald Trump and Elon Musk to bury the hatchet after their feud exploded in spectacular fashion.

Musk accused Trump of reckless spending, called for his impeachment, alleged that he was named in government files linked to the late convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein and floated the idea of forming a new political party.

The president lashed out at his former “First Buddy” with threats of retaliation and character attacks.

Into the fray stepped Ackman, a major Trump donor, who attempted to cool tensions by urging the two to reconcile.

“I support @realDonaldTrump and @elonmusk and they should make peace for the benefit of our great country,” Ackman wrote on X on Thursday.

“We are much stronger together than apart.”

Musk, who recently stepped down from his post leading the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), replied tersely: “You’re not wrong.”

The understated response was taken by some as a sign that a truce could be on the horizon, especially with reports suggesting the two may speak by phone Friday.

West, who has changed his name to Ye and no stranger to controversy himself, also chimed in with a plea for harmony.

“Broooos please noooooo. We love you both so much,” he posted on X, alongside an emoji of two people embracing.

Neither Ackman nor Ye’s representatives immediately responded to requests for comment from The Post.

Whether an olive branch will be extended remains uncertain.

Trump does not intend to speak with Elon Musk on Friday, a person with knowledge of the situation told The Post.

“President Trump is focused on making our country great again and passing the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill,”’ White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt told The Post on Friday.

The Post has sought comment from Musk.

The blowup marks a dramatic shift in a relationship that only months ago had seemed foundational to Trump’s second-term plans.

Following a July 2024 assassination attempt that nearly killed Trump during a campaign rally, Musk offered his full-throated endorsement of his White House bid.

Musk later stood beside him at Mar-a-Lago on election night, celebrating the GOP’s victory and was subsequently tapped to help lead the newly formed DOGE — an agency charged with slashing federal expenditures.

Throughout the early months of Trump’s second term, Musk was frequently seen at the White House, occasionally accompanied by his son X Æ A-XII.

The Tesla and SpaceX CEO appeared to be positioning himself as a high-tech consigliere in the administration’s inner circle.

But tensions began to simmer this spring. Musk started publicly distancing himself from the administration in May, criticizing several policy decisions and retreating from his previous role as an informal adviser.

The conflict went nuclear Thursday, with Musk launching a volley of blistering posts on X aimed at Trump’s fiscal agenda — particularly his recent tax legislation, which Musk dubbed the “Big Ugly Spending Bill.”

Musk also insinuated that Trump could be named in the sealed files related to Epstein and threatened to retire SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft, jeopardizing a crucial transportation link between NASA and private space operations.

Trump hit back swiftly. During a White House ceremony later that day, he dismissed Musk’s critiques as “Trump Derangement Syndrome,” before turning to Truth Social to defend his economic policies and suggesting Musk had “gone crazy.”

He also reportedly discussed revoking government contracts held by Musk’s companies.

The highly public nature of the feud — and the speed with which it escalated — sent shockwaves through political and business circles, with some observers warning it could fracture the fragile coalition that has fused populist conservatism with Silicon Valley’s libertarian streak.

Share.

Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version