ELON MUSK's flagship electric vehicle (EV) company has become a focal point of debate over the Trump administration's government cutback campaign.
Democrats have made a show of returning their EVs and celebrating Tesla's stock decline, while the White House has pushed to prop up the company.
The cultural movement around Tesla as an ideological signifier has taken a dark turn in recent days, with an outbreak of vandalism against vehicles and dealerships.
Attorney General Pam Bondi on Thursday announced the arrest of three individuals who used Molotov cocktails to set Tesla vehicles on fire. A day earlier, Bondi classified vandalism against Tesla as “domestic terrorism.”
That hasn’t stopped the outpouring of anger from Democrats, liberal commentators and late-night talk show hosts, who view Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) as public enemy No. 1.
“The world’s richest mannequin has been trying to drum up sympathy for himself lately,” Jimmy Kimmel said Wednesday night on his late night ABC talk show. “His sales are down, his stock is down.”
After playing a clip of Musk lamenting the vandalism against Teslas, Kimmel said: “Let me see if I can explain this for you. When you pull out a chainsaw to celebrate firing thousands of people, they get mad.”
Musk responded, calling Kimmel an “unfunny jerk.”
Over the weekend, Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) posted a video of himself returning his Tesla and purchasing a Chevy Tahoe SUV.
“This one was made by union labor, United Auto Workers in Arlington, Texas,” Kelly said. “Always good to buy union cars. Incredibly reliable.”
And Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) shared a clip from a recent town hall event in which he said he checks out Tesla’s stock swoon throughout the day “to give me a little boost.”
Some Democrats are pushing back at those who are rooting for Tesla to fail.
Former Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.), who ran a lonely primary challenge against former President Biden in 2020, blasted Walz for celebrating Tesla’s stock decline.
“What I saw my governor and friend say…was appalling,” Phillips told NewsNation.
“Not only does that hurt a lot of Minnesotans who have their money in pension funds, it hurts Tesla employees…no elected official should ever demean an American company like that,” he added.
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) condemned the vandalism against Teslas.
"I'm not going to root against Tesla,” he said. “There are 20,000 people who work in my district who make a living off this. They're building electric vehicles that ultimately are good for the climate. I have huge, huge problems with what Elon Musk is doing. Have the protests and the conversation and criticism of Musk. Just don't take it out on a company where you have workers, where you have engineers, where you have scientists which are creating wealth for the country, which is helping the climate.”
Tesla’s stock price has fallen by about 50 percent since mid-December, weeks before Musk took on a high-profile role advising President Trump. The company also issued a recall of more than 46,000 Cybertrucks on Thursday over a faulty panel.