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Maga Thaw? Why Elon Musk is shelving third-party dreams - and will back JD Vance instead

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In a surprising pivot from political chaos to calculated restraint, Elon Musk has stepped back from his plan to launch the “America Party”—a proposed third-party alternative intended to disrupt the U.S. political duopoly. Sources close to him reveal that Musk is now prioritising his business empire and maintaining his alliance with Vice President JD Vance , rather than igniting a potentially fulsome rebellion.

The Man Behind the Movement

Musk’s involvement in the 2024 election extended far beyond flashy endorsements. His America PAC poured nearly $300 million into the battleground states, leveraging advanced messaging strategies and the reach of X to engineer strategic voter influence. While Trump commanded the stage, Musk controlled the backstage, shaping narrative arcs with precision. That campaign muscle powered by Silicon Valley optics helped catapult JD Vance, then Trump’s running mate, into the vice presidency. Musk’s campaign infrastructure evolved into a potent political tool, forging a bond with Vance that is equal parts ideology and necessity.

A Political Retreat with Purpose

What seemed like a bold divergence—from declaring an “America Party” for the disaffected to suddenly pulling the plug—was not a whim but a strategic recalibration. Musk recognized that splitting conservative votes with a third party could fracture his alliance with Vance and weaken any future influence within the GOP. Instead, whispers within his inner circle suggest Musk is preparing to back Vance’s 2028 presidential campaign, deploying his resources in a focused, high-leverage manner rather than building from scratch.

Words With Power — But Not the Power to Govern

Musk and Donald Trump had a fierce public falling-out earlier this year—Musk criticized Trump’s tax-and-spend bills; Trump threatened his federal contracts. But their feud has seemingly thawed. Trump, now back in office, has publicly endorsed Musk’s businesses. Musk, for his part, has gone silent on X. Strategically, this détente is more than cordial — it’s beneficial. A recent executive order easing launch permits for rockets, plus confirmation that SpaceX contracts remain intact, underscore how Musk’s influence remains both tolerated and rewarded.

The Silence That Speaks Volumes

Behind the scenes, plans for the America Party have grown quiet. Calls with third-party organisers were canceled under the guise of business priorities. High-profile names who had flirted with the idea—like Andrew Yang and Mark Cuban—haven’t heard from Musk’s team. Even overtures from the Libertarian Party, which had offered to leverage its ballot-access infrastructure, have gone unanswered. Party officials describe the lack of response as “eerie.”

Why the Retreat Makes Strategic Sense

Launching a new political entity in America means navigating a labyrinth of state-level laws, signature drives, legal filings, and grassroots networks. Musk’s inner team, while expert in rockets and auto assembly lines, lacks the boots-on-the-ground infrastructure required for party-building. More to the point, many Republican consultants who rode with Musk in 2024 would risk their careers by joining a rival party. In contrast, supporting a rising star like Vance keeps those wires intact — and the influence within established structures intact.

Business, Influence, and the Long Game

Musk’s retreat from party-building doesn’t mark a retreat from politics. His companies, his platforms, and now his relationship with Vance ensure he remains deeply enmeshed in policymaking and electoral strategy—without ever wearing a candidate’s sash. By stepping away from the spectacle of third-party theatrics and stepping closer to the man he helped bring to power, Musk is choosing the discreet comfort of leverage over the chaos of headline-grabbing insurgency.

The Bottom Line

Elon Musk isn’t withdrawing from influence—he’s refining it. The America Party may fade into the realm of political what-ifs, but the Musk–Vance axis is very real. As the 2026 midterms loom and the 2028 race begins to take shape, one thing is clear: Musk remains a kingmaker, even when he isn’t running for office himself.
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