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President Trump and Elon Musk, arguably the two most unorthodox and influential American leaders of the 21st century, are practicing and fine-tuning a fused theory of governing power:
- Masculine maximalism.
1 Why it matters:
Trump and Musk believe powerfully in maximalist action and language — which is being carried out by strong (mostly) white men — as blunt, uncompromising instruments to prove new limits both to power and what’s possible.
- “Fix Bayonets,” Steve Bannon, a first-term Trump official whose “War Room” podcast makes him one of the most widely followed outside MAGA voices, texted us. “We are ‘Burning Daylight’ — short window to get this done.”
Trump, first in business and then politics, and Musk, first in business and now politics, are feeding off each other’s natural instincts to do, say and operate by their own new rules.
- These instincts made them rich, famous and impervious to traditional rules, norms and even laws. Their success makes dissuasion by others futile, administration officials tell us.
- Trump and Musk view masculinity quite similarly: tough-guy language, macho actions, irreverent, crude — and often unmoved by emotionalism, empathy or restraint.
The big picture: So much has happened so fast, in so little time, that it’s hard to measure what matters most in the first 24 days of the Trump presidency (not even a month yet!). But stepping way back and appraising the totality of actions, the biggest shift is the instant imposition of this new power theory across all of government and the Republican Party:
- There’s no opposition to this maximalist approach among Trump’s staff or major MAGA media voices. And it’s extremely limited among Republican lawmakers: Some have privately expressed concerns about DOGE, and winced at Vice President Vance’s salvo about judges not being “allowed to control the executive’s legitimate power.” But even most GOP senators who expressed initial reservations about Cabinet picks have turned supportive.
2 Here’s the Trump-Musk formula:
Power asserted, power claimed: Trump and Musk, much like they did in the private sector, set their own new limits of authority by stating them emphatically and acting aggressively. Trump and Musk have moved to cut at least 10,000 federal workers, while vowing “large-scale reductions in force (RIFs)” as part of “workforce reform” … and offered deferred resignation packages to more than 2 million federal workers. (A federal judge on Wednesday let the “buyout” program proceed. 75,000 workers have taken the deal.)
- Trump and Musk sought to freeze federal grants and loans that total in the trillions … and targeted “hundreds of billions” in fraudulent federal spending. Musk’s DOGE gained access to Treasury’s highly sensitive payment system. Trump threatened a global trade war … stripped security details from his own former secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, and other former officials … revoked the security clearance of former President Biden, ending his classified intelligence briefings … and fired more than a dozen inspectors general — watchdogs who root out Executive Branch abuse.
- Trump’s Pentagon deployed active-duty troops to the Southwest border. Trump’s Justice Department pushed federal prosecutors to drop corruption charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams. And Trump pardoned former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D), who went to prison for political corruption.
- Trump, after campaigning as an American First hardliner, often sounds like limitless expansionist: saying the U.S. would “take over” Gaza … and pushing to buy Greenland, make Canada the 51st state and take back the Panama Canal.
3 Precedents are for chumps:
Both think conventional, polite, rule-following CEOs and leaders are suckers and conformists. They believe wimps and posers play by the rules, worry about hurt feelings or damaged lives, and seek consensus. So far, Trump and Musk have every reason to feel vindicated: Most Republicans in Congress have sat by idly, or applauded gleefully, as the two laid claim to congressional powers of the purse and scrutinizing Cabinet picks.
- Trump and Musk are freezing programs and firing federal employees — with scant scrutiny and little transparency. A Wall Street Journal editorial points out that Trump deliberately incited legal challenges with his executive order ending birthright citizenship, and by firing a member of the National Labor Relations Board: “Trump believes he’ll win on both issues because he thinks previous Supreme Court rulings were wrongly decided.” The Journal says Trump is on new legal ground by targeting the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and USAID — both of which were established by Congress.
4 Let men be men
Yes, there are some powerful women around Trump — led by White House chief of staff Susie Wiles.
- But the vast majority of the public and private action is carried about by aggressive, white men, including Musk and his all-male DOGE posse; Stephen Miller, a White House deputy chief of staff who also is homeland security adviser and immigration lead; and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, the former Fox News star and decorated Army combat veteran who’s bringing some of Trump’s most disruptive dreams to life.
5 Humiliate the humbled:
Both Trump and Musk use public appearances and social media posts to bully and pummel critics across politics, media and culture. They scoff at calls for humility and grace when blessed with power. In the case of transgender people, they want to restore “biological truth” and “the immutable biological reality of sex,” as a Day 1 executive orderput it, by making it “the policy of the United States to recognize two sexes, male and female.”
- Both men like to provoke outrage — and outrageous responses. That makes Trump and Musk the center of the national conversation — and baits hyperventilating critics into outrageous responses. Trump and Musk have followed through on their promise to decimate DEI, targeting hundreds of such jobs. The Free Press wrote that the Trump administration, “and many of its highest-profile supporters, are fueling the idea that any minority with a job might not actually deserve it. These people see DEI everywhere.”
6 Fused styles, fused worldview:
As captured by Vance’s AI speech in Paris this week, the most surprising twist in the Trump governing agenda reflects a fusion not just of the Trump and Musk styles but also their worldviews — nationalism with techno-optimism.
- Trump was indifferent or outright hostile to many Big Tech companies in his first term and most of his campaign. But now: Quick, vast AI expansion sits at the heart of his evolving economic agenda and philosophy. At the same time, Musk has been a vocal champion of nationalism. They’re of one style, and increasingly of one shared mind and ideology.
7 Behind the scenes:
Charlie Kirk — founder and president of Turning Point USA, MAGA’s youth wing, and host of one of the most powerful MAGA podcasts — told us the “flood the zone” aggressiveness of the administration’s first month will only increase as more top officials get confirmed and rolling. “This is just setting the foundation,” Kirk said. “He’s set a pace and said: My team can see the tempo I want.”
- Kirk, who is very close to Trump, told us Trump’s maximalist instincts are being amplified by his battle-hardened staff and Cabinet. “You have an entire Avengers team of people able to fulfill the president’s wishes and orders,” Kirk said. “When you’re in exile for a couple of years, and have people writing your political eulogy, you enter with increased motivation and energy.”
- Kirk, whose social media feeds are one of the most vivid reflections (and drivers) of MAGA sentiment, said his callers and followers are thrilled with what they’re getting: “They knew he was serious. But they didn’t know they’d get it so quickly, decisively and declaratively.”
8 Reality check:
Trump is very intentionally testing the limits of executive power. The WSJ editorial contends: “Trump may be wrong, but there is no constitutional crisis as the cases make their way through the courts.”
What to watch: Democrats are beyond baffled on how to deal with Trump, Musk and maximalist power simultaneously. The opposition lacks anyone with a remotely similar social media and traditional media star power, or a coherent legislative way to slow or stop them.
- So Democrats are down to betting on the courts — or a future maximalist public backlash to maximalism.
Go deeper … “Behind the Curtain: Purges, punishments, payback.”
- Join Jim & Mike next Wednesday for a webinar on “How Trump Thinks” — with specia
BY: Mike Allen, Jim VandeHei