Completely untethered: Tesla's board has dropped Musk's leash, and he is running amok
Trump's response was to declare Musk a 'train wreck' that had gone off the rails over the past five weeks.
But not a peep yet from the Tesla board, which in theory is supposed to keep Musk on the rails. Shareholders must surely be waiting for updates from the company.
For perspective, imagine how the board of BHP would react if its boss Mike Henry or Commonwealth Bank's chief executive, Matt Comyn, decided to start a political party as a part-time gig.
They would be sent packing.
For the Tesla board, placing restraints on a rogue chief executive is way more difficult. In part, this is because Musk IS Tesla – its founder, its major shareholder and its strategy engine.
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To the extent that parallels can be found in Australia in the hazards of dealing with entrepreneurial founders, Wisetech's Richard White and Fortescue's creator and major shareholder, Andrew Forrest, would be the closest.
White's complicated personal life, including multiple relationships with women, including WiseTech employees, has resulted in board upheaval following a number of complaints about inappropriate conduct, a number of which have been settled.
A pushback from the Wisetech board was ultimately unsuccessful, leading to a mass resignation of a number of directors. Ultimately, White prevailed.
Forrest's strategic deviation into saving the planet using Fortescue's financial resources to finance green projects has been tolerated rather than encouraged by many shareholders. He has been branded a zealot and has been an outspoken critic – particularly of those in the oil and gas industry. But his family's 36 per cent stake in Fortescue has rendered him an untouchable king of the company.
Meanwhile, shareholders and regulators have attempted to intervene in the governance of Tesla for years – including a 2018 shareholder lawsuit to limit a stratospheric $US50 billion ($77 billion) pay package awarded to Musk based on hitting market capitalisation milestones.
In her ruling in favour of the shareholder, Delaware judge Kathaleen McCormick noted: 'There were undoubtedly a range of healthy amounts that the board could have decided to pay Musk,' McCormick wrote, but she said the board instead 'capitulated to Musk's terms and then failed to prove that those terms were entirely fair'.
But Musk's latest action, which will create for him a major distraction from running Tesla, is arguably much more serious for the company and its other shareholders.
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It threatens to undermine the performance of the company that is already challenged by falling sales volumes and a massive influx of competition from China electric vehicle companies.
Two weeks ago, Elon Musk reportedly fired Omead Afshar, the automaker's vice president of manufacturing and operations, CNBC has confirmed, following declines in car sales in key markets this year. His termination followed the resignation of Milan Kovac, previously head of Tesla's Optimus humanoid robotics program, last month.
At this point, Musk's presence at the helm of Tesla is sorely needed.

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7NEWS
an hour ago
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Tesla shares slump after Elon Musk announces new political party
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Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Tesla shares slump after Elon Musk announces new political party
Tesla's stock price plunged by around seven per cent on Monday, the first day of trading after company CEO Elon Musk announced he would form the 'America Party' over the weekend. The move drives another wedge between Mr Musk and US President Donald Trump, who criticised the Tesla chief's plan to challenge the country's existing two-party political system on his own social media platform. 'The one thing Third Parties are good for is the creation of Complete and Total DISRUPTION & CHAOS, and we have enough of that with the Radical Left Democrats, who have lost their confidence and their minds!' said President Trump in a Truth Social post on Sunday (July 6). Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Supplied Credit: CarExpert '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,' he told reporters the same day. A day earlier on Saturday (July 5), Mr Musk said a poll he conducted on his own social media platform, X, showed resoundingly that Americans want a third political party. 'By a factor of 2 to 1, you want a new political party and you shall have it,' he posted on X. 'When it comes to bankrupting our country with waste & graft, we live in a one-party system, not a democracy. Today, the America Party is formed to give you back your freedom.' Supplied Credit: CarExpert By noon on Monday, however, Tesla stock had fallen by 7.6 per cent or about $21 per share, seemingly due to fears from investors that politics would damage the Tesla brand, wiping about US$15 billion (A$23.05bn) from the market value of the US electric car maker, although Mr Musk remains the world's richest person. At the close of NASDAQ stock exchange trading yesterday, Tesla shares were down by US$21.41 or 6.79 per cent, to US$293.94, and are now down by about 14 per cent since early June, when Mr Musk first publicly criticised President Trump and the Republican-backed One Big Beautiful Bill. Tesla stocks are down 31 per cent since Mr Trump's inauguration in January, and the company last week reported almost 14 per cent fewer deliveries in the second quarter of this year. In its worst sales performance since 2022, Tesla has now posted two consecutive quarterly declines in vehicle deliveries in 2025, amid controversy and protests about Mr Musk's previous involvement with the Trump administration and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Supplied Credit: CarExpert After donating at least US$277 million (A$425.04m) to the Trump camp during the 2024 US election campaign and then heading up DOGE, the CEO of both Tesla and SpaceX began a very public feud with President Trump when he said the administration's new funding bill would plunge Americans into debut for generations to come. Signed into law on July 4, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act is forecast to add about US$3.4 trillion (A$5.22tn) to the US national deficit over the coming decade, according to estimates by the Congressional Budget Office. However, the Trump administration has dismissed estimates like these on the basis they do not factor in economic growth under the bill, and President Trump has accused Mr Musk of criticising the bill because it will end federal subsidies for Tesla. But Mr Musk has long encouraged the Trump administration to axe US government tax credits for electric vehicles, and after President Trump threatened to cancel government contracts awarded to Mr Musk's companies, he said on X that SpaceX would 'begin decommissioning its [the US government's] Dragon spacecraft immediately', putting several US space programs at risk. SpaceX is one of the US government's largest defence contractors and, apart from Tesla, Mr Musk also heads up The Boring Company, Starlink, Neuralink and xAI. MORE: Everything Tesla


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2 hours ago
- Canberra Times
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