WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Friday dismissed Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s “super bad feeling” about the economy that is reportedly prompting the electric vehicle company to cut 10% of its workforce.
“Lots of luck to his trip to the moon,” Biden said after reeling off names of car and technology companies that are hiring more workers. “I mean, I don’t know.”
Musk has increasingly warned about risks of a recession, and according to a report from Reuters, the billionaire CEO told Tesla executives Thursday he needs to cut about 10% of Tesla jobs because of his “super bad feeling.” The electric carmaker employed about 100,000 people at the end of 2021.
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Biden, responding to a reporter’s question about Musk’s plans, pointed to other companies that are expanding.
“While Elon Musk was talking about that, Ford is increasing their investment overwhelmingly,” Biden said, referring to Ford’s announcement Thursday of a $3.7 billion investment in Ohio, Michigan and Missouri to hire 6,000 workers focused mostly on electric vehicle production.
The president touted other electric vehicle investments from Chrysler and plans from Intel, the world’s largest semiconductor manufacturer, to build a $20 billion complex outside Columbus, Ohio
More:Ford investing $3.7B to create 6,200 jobs in Michigan, Ohio, Missouri
The exchange came as the White House faces increasing pressure to address economic concerns amid 40-year high inflation. Biden’s “trip to the moon” remark appeared aimed at Musk’s stated goal for his space company to be prepared for a moon voyage by 2024.
“Thank you Mr President!” Musk responded in a Tweet shortly after the president’s comments.
Musk, a frequent critic of Biden and Democrats, has a complicated relationship with the White House. As the leading manufacturer of electric vehicles, Tesla is the poster child for the transition from carbon-emitting vehicles that Biden often talks about. But Musk opposes unions, which the president supports, and has taken repeated shots at Biden’s presidency.
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It took Biden more than a year in office to mention “Tesla” in a public speech, finally doing so in February. Tesla was not among was auto companies invited to the White House last August when Biden signed an executive order with the goal of zero-emissions vehicles accounting for half of all automobiles sold in the US by 2030.
Biden’s remarks came after he delivered a speech touting a positive new jobs report that showed 390,000 jobs were added in May, maintaining a low unemployment rate of 3.6%.
Speaking in Rehoboth Beach, Del., where Biden is spending the weekend, the president said that “even with today’s good news” he knows that “Americans remain anxious” because of high consumer prices. He said Americans should “feel confident that we’ll meet these challenges.”
Although Biden did not directly mention fears of a recession, he said he’s confident that steps to tame inflation won’t come at the expense of jobs and other gains.
“We’ve laid an economic foundation that’s historically strong, and now we’re moving forward to a new moment where we can build on that foundation to build a future of stable steady growth, so we can bring down inflation without sacrificing all the historic gains we’ve made.”
More:Some top economists say a recession is growing more likely, but it probably would be mild
Reach Joey Garrison on Twitter @joeygarrison.
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George is Digismak’s reported cum editor with 13 years of experience in Journalism