Welcome to Balance of Power, bringing you the latest in global politics. If you haven’t yet, sign up here. It’s a familiar pattern: the US is lurching toward a government shutdown unless Congress can agree on a funding plan by midnight in Washington. Less familiar this time, perhaps unique, is that the original deal was shot down not by an elected representative, but by the world’s richest person. Elon Musk’s intervention is a demonstration of his influence at the highest level of political affairs even before his presumed boss, Donald Trump, returns to the presidency. It’s a shot across the bows for the world as well as for America. It may even be a warning to Trump. Musk took to X, the platform he owns, with a blizzard of posts on Wednesday criticizing the deal that House speaker and Trump loyalist Mike Johnson had crafted with Democratic members to allow the government to keep functioning, and avert the possibility of default. Johnson duly came back with a subsequent bill that had Trump and Musk’s blessing, but it failed to win Democratic support and that also fell. The clock is now ticking on a compromise, if any is possible. Having sown chaos in Washington, Musk turned to Berlin with a provocative post in the European morning today stating that “Only the AfD can save Germany.” That’s a reference to the far-right party that’s beyond the pale even for most fellow anti-immigration populists at European level but which is polling in second place ahead of Germany’s February elections. On Monday, Musk was pictured with the British equivalent, Nigel Farage, and was reported to be weighing a $100 million donation for his Reform UK party that would enable Farage to more seriously challenge the Westminster establishment and shift the political landscape to the nationalist right. It may all be in a week’s work for Musk. But it’s an ominous new reality for the world. — Alan Crawford Musk during a Trump campaign event in New York on Oct. 27. Photographer: Adam Gray/Bloomberg |