How Is Elon Musk’s Third Party Planning Going?

How Is Elon Musk’s Third Party Planning Going?
Image generated by IVN staff.
Published: 13 Aug, 2025
4 min read

“What happened to Elon Musk’s America Party? It’s been a month and we’re still waiting.” - Indy100

The America Party was announced in the middle of a public breakup between Elon Musk and President Donald Trump. The two parted ways at the end of May. Musk criticized Trump’s signature tax cut and his “Big Beautiful Bill,” which tied immigration crackdowns to massive new spending.

Musk even retweeted a post, later deleted, that said Trump should be impeached and replaced with Vice President JD Vance. He also warned that Trump’s tariffs would cause a recession in the second half of the year and asked his 224 million followers whether it was time to “create a new political party in America that actually represents the 80% in the middle.”

Trump responded, saying that “the easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elon’s Governmental Subsidies and Contracts. I was always surprised that Biden didn’t do it.”

Musk then posted that it’s “time to drop the really big bomb” that Trump “is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day DJT!”

Then, on July 5, 2025, Musk told his followers that the America Party had been formed.

The Familiar Rush to Dismiss Third Parties

Within days, a familiar script began to play out.

Speaking to reporters before boarding Air Force One in Morristown, New Jersey, Trump said:

“I think it’s ridiculous to start a third party. We have a tremendous success with the Republican Party. The Democrats have lost their way, but it’s always been a two-party system, and I think starting a third party just adds to confusion. It really seems to have been developed for two parties. Third parties have never worked. So he can have fun with it, but I think it’s ridiculous.”

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Trump elaborated on his Truth Social platform:

“Third parties have a long history of helping the opposition and the creation of Complete and Total DISRUPTION & CHAOS.”

“We have enough of that with the Radical Left Democrats, who have lost their confidence and their minds! Republicans, on the other hand, are a smooth-running ‘machine,’ that just passed the biggest Bill of its kind in the History of our Country.”

Trump Truth social post

National outlets like TIME and Business Insider piled on, publishing early analyses predicting certain doom.

Ironically, other third-party figures, including Libertarian Party Chairman Steven Nekhaila, pointed to the long history of failed challenges to the Republican-Democratic duopoly, warning of the steep ballot access and infrastructure requirements.

Supposedly independent pollsters framed survey questions around Musk personally, turning what could have been a measure of public hunger for a third party into a referendum on one man’s popularity.

The System is Built to Resist Change

The barriers to entry are not accidental. For more than a century, the two major parties have designed ballot rules, funding systems, and debate requirements to make sure competition rarely survives. That reality forces every new party to start deep in the hole, digging out from cynicism and historical precedent. The fact that no one has done it yet is precisely why so many dismiss Musk’s chances.

Musk’s History of Building New Realities

But history also shows Musk has repeatedly turned the “impossible” into the inevitable. He reimagined the car industry with Tesla, proving electric vehicles could be desirable and profitable. He redefined space exploration with SpaceX, creating reusable rockets that NASA now relies on. He took a flailing social media company and transformed it into X, reshaping its business model and platform culture.

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These ventures did not simply improve existing systems. They disrupted and rewrote them. That track record is why it is certainly possible to believe that Musk could bring the same approach to America’s political system, rethinking its structures, updating it for the 21st century, and breaking the cycle of the two major parties offering voters the same narrow set of unsatisfying choices year after year.

Resources to Match the Vision

Most third-party efforts collapse under the weight of legal hurdles, ballot fights, and a lack of funding. Musk is the wealthiest man in the world. He spent almost $300 million helping Trump get elected in 2024. On June 27, just before announcing the America Party, he gave $15 million to GOP super PACs, showing the kind of resources he can rapidly deploy in politics.

Unlike most would-be third-party reformers, Musk does not have to raise the money first or wait for permission from donors to act.

The Future is the Point

The America Party is not yet on the ballot, has no candidates, and has not made public that it has taken any formal organizational steps. But that does not mean it cannot. Suppose Musk applies the same imagination and determination he has brought to cars, space, and technology. In that case, there is no reason the American political system cannot be redesigned for a new century – one that offers more than the two-party trap that has defined national politics for generations.

If the past is any guide, Musk is not in the business of accepting the world as it is. He is in the business of creating the world as it could be.

Now the question is whether independent voters, not wanting to miss the party or their place in history, will send Elon an RSVP.

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