More than 60 protests were planned for Saturday, and a dozen more for Sunday, at Tesla showrooms across the United States, as backlash continues against CEO Elon Musk for his cost-cutting role at the Department of Government Efficiency.
(CNN) â More than 60 protests were planned for Saturday, and a dozen more for Sunday, at Tesla showrooms across the United States, as backlash continues against CEO Elon Musk for his cost-cutting role at the Department of Government Efficiency.
Just a week after more than 200 demonstrations took place at Tesla locations as part of the grassroots âTesla Takedownâ movement, some locations doubled up on Saturday as âHands Off!â rally locations â a separately organized mass day of protests nationwide.
The Tesla Takedown campaign encourages Tesla drivers to sell their vehicles and company stakeholders to sell their shares of stock to hurt the worldâs richest man, whose wealth is mostly tied to the electric vehicle maker.
Over 50 demonstrators stood outside of a Tesla showroom in Rockville, Maryland, a suburb of Washington, DC, on Saturday.
Susan Barnett, a media professional from New York City, said she came to Maryland for a reunion with two longtime friends and to do advocacy work for safe water and foreign government assistance.
âCongress has to remember that despite what the White House is saying, we do have a stake in the world,â Barnett told CNN.
DOGE has made cuts to a broad swath of federal agencies by slashing contracts and laying off employees or offering them buyouts to leave their roles. The DOGE website claims it has saved taxpayers $140 billion. (CNN could not confirm the accuracy of DOGEâs figure.)
Musk recently claimed that protesters at Tesla locations are being paid, posting last week on his social media platform X, âWho is funding and organizing all of these paid protests?â
Tesla has not responded to CNNâs request for comment.
Madeline Gupta told CNN outside the Tesla location in Rockville that sheâs not being paid. While holding a sign reading âDemocracy over oligarchy,â Gupta said she is concerned by policy changes under President Donald Trumpâs administration.
âThis new administration, including Musk, who wasnât even elected, is trying to destroy our democracy, and we cannot let that happen,â she said.
Tesla Takedown organizers believe the campaign, which is in its eighth week, will continue to grow despite pushback from Musk and the Trump administration.
âBlaming âpaid protestorsâ is a deflection from admitting how unpopular Musk and DOGE has become,â organizers told CNN.
Tesla shares closed at $239.43 on Friday, a more than 50% drop from their December peak. The decline followed Teslaâs announcement Wednesday that sales plunged 13% in the first three months of 2025 â the largest drop in its history. The company said it delivered 336,681 cars, which was 50,000 fewer than the first quarter of 2024.
Hints of Muskâs exit from DOGE
Musk â the worldâs richest man and owner of Tesla, SpaceX and the social media platform X â was initially tapped to co-head DOGE with billionaire biotech mogul Vivek Ramaswamy, with the temporary agency finishing up its cost-cutting efforts âno later than July 4, 2026,â according to Trump.
But Ramaswamyâs time was short-lived, and Muskâs role as the face of DOGE may conclude sooner than expected. Trump on Monday told reporters that âat some point, (Musk is) going to be going back. He wants to.â
Musk responded Wednesday on X that it was âfake newsâ that he would step away from DOGE in the coming weeks.
The administration, however, confirmed on Wednesday that Musk is expected to wrap up his stint as Trumpâs hatchet man in late May or June, when his 130 days as a âspecial government employeeâ comes to an end.
And on March 20, Musk admitted to Tesla staff in Austin, Texas, that he is âstretched pretty thin. I have like 17 jobs.â Musk has also discussed the toll the backlash has taken on him and his electric car company.
In an interview with Fox Newsâ Bret Baier that aired on March 28, Musk responded to criticism he gets about DOGE and addressed the vandalism against Tesla.
âItâs actually disadvantageous for me to be in the government, not advantageous,â Musk said about his role with DOGE. âMy companies are suffering because Iâm in the government.â
âDo you think it helps sales if (Tesla) dealerships are being firebombed? Of course not,â Musk said.
Demonstrations at Tesla showrooms have mostly been peaceful, although there have been separate reports of vandalism at Tesla locations.
Axios media correspondent Sara Fischer, who has covered Musk extensively, told CNNâs Jessica Dean on Saturday that he is âsomebody who can get bored really easily.â She said he would probably prefer to return to the private sector amid the trade war and after chalking up his time with DOGE as a win.
âI think he âcame, saw and conquered,â right?â said Fischer, a CNN media analyst. âHe came, he did DOGE, he cut spending. Heâll go back to the private sector and call the whole thing a victory. He also then gets to sort of wipe his hands clean of some of these economic policies if they fall through.â
The-CNN-Wire
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