There are signs the billionaire is becoming unpopular with the very demographic group most likely to buy EVs
Elon Musk has long flirted with rightwing politics, and delights in pushing an image of himself as a contrarian showman. Yet in recent months the billionaire’s political allegiances have started to raise a question for Tesla, the company that he built into the world’s largest electric carmaker: just how far can he go before customers start to abandon his products?
The German pharmacy chain Rossmann was one of the first to put its head above the parapet this week. The family-owned company announced that it would not add to the 34 Teslas in its company fleet because of Musk’s endorsement of Donald Trump for US president.
More Stories
Former bosses at video games firm Ubisoft on trial in France accused of sexual harassment
High-rise, high expectations: is Casablanca’s finance hub a model for African development?
Millions of Australian workers to get an above-inflation pay rise as minimum wage lifts by 3.5%