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Elon Musk is again making political waves, this time not through a tweet or podcast appearance, but in formal financial documents.
History hasn’t been too kind to third parties, independents or write-ins that seek to shake up the political scene, CNN’s Harry Enten writes. Here’s what the polls say about Musk’s plans.
Tesla's profits fell 16% over a three-month period ending in June that overlapped with the end of chief executive Elon Musk's tenure in the White House and his ensuing public clash with President ...
Tesla will report its second-quarter earnings on Wednesday evening (United States time), with investors and analysts watching ...
In a familiar critique of corporate structures, Musk also weighed in on the ideal environment for fostering such long-term, ...
Gregor Townsend praised his Scotland players for showing their “true identity” after they bounced back from defeat to round ...
The President is suing the mogul for billions of dollars over an article about Jeffrey Epstein. The friendship of convenience ...
John Swinney has pledged to “turn the heat up” on the UK Government to allow a second independence referendum as part of his ...
President Trump has held his MAGA coalition together for a decade. But many supporters say his refusal to release information ...
After the president appeared to mimic an Asian accent, according to social media users, one person asked Musk's AI chatbot, ...
Interview - Providing key insights into current affairs, President Isaias Afwerki sat down with national media outlets on July 19, 2025. The wide-ranging first part interview delved into timely global ...
Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski and Maine’s Susan Collins joined Senate Democrats in opposition to Republican cuts to organizations ...