The Dictatorship
Has Elon Musk already worn out his welcome with Trump?

By Chris Hayes
This is an adapted excerpt from the Nov. 13 episode of “All In with Chris Hayes.”
You know the old adage, “Guests, like fish, begin to smell after three days”? Well, it’s been a week since Donald Trump was elected as our next president and there are numerous reports that one notable guest at Mar-a-Lago is wearing out his welcome: The world’s richest man, Elon Musk.
Musk has become “America’s most powerful private citizen,” according to The New York Times.
Musk used his social media platform and his vast personal wealth to help get Trump elected. In return, the president-elect announced Wednesday that he was putting Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy in charge of a still-theoretical Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, to slash government spending.
Musk has become “America’s most powerful private citizen,” according to The New York Times. He’s reportedly sitting in on job interviews with the Trump team and pushing for his Silicon Valley friends to get plum positions in the White House.
The Times even reports:
At Mar-a-Lago one recent evening, he walked into the dining room about 30 minutes after the president-elect did and received a similar standing ovation, according to two people who saw him enter.
Well, if there’s one thing we know about Trump, it’s that he doesn’t love sharing the spotlight.
It seems clear Musk has bottomless ambitions. The South African-born tech billionaire is barred from running for high office by the Constitution because he’s not a native-born U.S. citizen. So this is as close as he is going to get and he seems to be making the most of it.
We’ve joked darkly about Musk setting himself up as a sort of co-president but it’s not just us. Two people familiar with the transition now tell NBC News that Musk may be overstaying his welcome in Trump world.
“He’s behaving as if he’s a co-president and making sure everyone knows it,” one of those people said.
More insiders told Politico’s Playbook: “Musk has become almost a comical distraction, hanging around Mar-a-Lago, sidling into high-level transition meetings and giving unsolicited feedback on Trump’s personnel decisions.” As one of them said, “Elon is getting a little big for his britches.”
“Elon won’t go home,” Trump said. “I can’t get rid of him. Until I don’t like him.”
Now, this may just be backbiting insiders who are envious of Musk’s close relationship with the future president, but it tells me that even some people close to Trump, who helped him win over working-class voters, aren’t crazy about the world’s richest man issuing orders to a democratic nation.
What will Americans think? Or, more to their point, what will Trump think? How many ” Skirmishes “ do we think the president-elect will let pass before his ego can no longer tolerate the adoration and authority of his co-president?
To that point, before Trump’s trip to the White House on Wednesday, he made a stop to meet with House Republican leaders, with Musk in tow. After the cameras went off, Trump told the lawmakers a joke about Musk, NBC reportedciting two lawmakers who were in the room at the time.
“Elon won’t go home,” the president-elect said. “I can’t get rid of him. Until I don’t like him.”
The good news is, Trump is likely to get sick of Musk. The bad news is, until that moment comes, our unprecedented experiment in handing over the levers of power to unelected billionaires continues.
Allison Detzel contributed.

Chris Hayes hosts “All In with Chris Hayes”at 8 p.m. ET Monday through Friday on BLN. He is the editor-at-large at The Nation. A former fellow at Harvard University’s Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics, Hayes was a Bernard Schwartz Fellow at the New America Foundation. His latest book is”A Colony in a Nation” (W. W. Norton).
The Dictatorship
Joe Scarborough slams GOP for ‘screwing their own constituents’ to protect ICE
Joe Scarborough slammed Republicans on Thursday’s “Morning Joe” for their repeated refusal to partner with Democrats to reopen some parts of the Department of Homeland Securityas the showdown in Washington, D.C., over federal immigration enforcement continues.
“Sometimes things are complicated and confusing,” Scarborough said. “This is not confusing.”
As he explained, Democrats are currently pushing legislation to partially fund some agencies inside DHS, including the Transportation Security Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agencyor FEMA. However, in order to pass those bills, Democrats, as the minority party, need Republicans to join in on the effort.
“If everybody agrees on something, they can pass it with unanimous consent. So Democrats keep going to the Senate floor,” Scarborough said, and “Republicans stand up and say no.”
A majority of the department’s funding has been withheld since the shutdown began on Feb. 14, when Democrats demanded a major overhaul of the agency carrying out President Donald Trump’s mass deportation effort.
Last week, more than 100,000 DHS workers missed their first full paycheck. Despite not being paid, many of those workers are considered essential employees and therefore are required to work during the shutdown.
“Republicans keep killing these opportunities to pay these people for the work they’re doing to keep us safe, in the air, on the seas,” Scarborough said. “All of this is to allow ICE to continue being the out-of-control, reckless agency that it was under Kristi Noem.”
Scarborough said he couldn’t understand “why Republicans are screwing their own constituents every single day: businesspeople that have to fly, families that have to get home to see their mothers or their fathers or the grandmothers or the grandfathers, parents that need to get to the kids to help with a child that may be sick.”
“I mean, why are Republicans doing this?” he asked. “Why aren’t they stopping this? Why is ICE so important to them that they are screwing their own constituents to protect guys in masks?”
You can watch Scarborough’s analysis in the clip at the top of the page.
Allison Detzel is an editor/producer for MS NOW. She was previously a segment producer for “AYMAN” and “The Mehdi Hasan Show.”
The Dictatorship
The years I spent defending César Chávez make me feel like a fool
Dolores Huerta and I shared the stage in November at a Chicago event honoring Latino leaders and journalists from the United States. What I remember most about that day was seeing the ballroom of mostly Latina women lining up to thank the co-founder of United Farm Workers and get her thoughts on how to respond to the way our communities have been targeted.
ICE was continuing its raids in Chicago, but here was Huerta, 95 years old, buoying us all.
I remember the servers, too, some of whom stopped after the event to take photos with Huerta and share that their local union uses the same labor-organizing tactics she did with the UFW. Immigration and Customs Enforcement was continuing its raids in Chicago, but here was Huerta, 95 years old, buoying us all. Here was our elder, imploring us to never give up, to keep organizing and fighting. If possible. Not as a slogan, but as something living and breathing in that room.
The New York Times on Wednesday published a multiyear investigation into allegations of sexual abuse of minors and rape against the other co-founder of the UFW: César Chávez. In part because I grew up with such a deep admiration of Chávez, reading Ana Murguia and Debra Rojas, both 66 years old, describe the pain they said Chávez inflicted upon them stopped me cold.
Then Huerta revealed that she had two unwelcome encounters with Chávez, one of which she described as rape. The two encounters, she said, resulted in two babies, whom she gave away to others to raise.

“I carried this secret for as long as I did,” she wrote, “because building the movement and securing farmworker rights was my life’s work.”
I sat with that for a long time.
In the 1970s, when I was a young boy who had just moved from Puerto Rico to the Bronx, Chávez was one of the first brown faces I saw on television. Few Latino men seemed to be fighting for something on television, but he was. I will forever argue that U.S. Latinos are not a monolith, but at a time when this country painted us as one, Chávez felt like our sole political leader.
“He represented the best of us — and by us, I mean Latino America,” said Manny Fernandez, the Times’ California editor and co-writer of Wednesday’s bombshell of a story. “And to discover that Chavez had this dark side is disturbing. But we do need to know who our heroes are.”
Chávez eventually reached the pinnacle of being the most famous Latino in the U.S. He passed away in 1993 and was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor by former President Bill Clinton in 1994, and his bust graced the Biden Oval Office. His quotes about community and the fight for social justice were part of the U.S. Latino lexicon. And the Times story about him being a predator and Huerta’s confirmation of it have sent shockwaves throughout the community.
To discover that Chavez had this dark side is disturbing. But we do need to know who our heroes are.
the new york times’ manny fernandez
Those of us who have studied his life in detail already know he was incredibly complicated. Biographers have documented his extramarital affairs, his authoritarian leadership and purges of his staff. Chávez once thought of undocumented workers as union scabs, a fact that right-wingers love to cite. But nothing prepared me for what Murguia, Rojas and Huerta revealed. They did not describe a complicated man. They described a rapist — a rapist of minors.
Ace Gustavo Arellano”https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-03-18/cesar-chavez-myth-abuse-allegations”>wrote in his column for the Los Angeles Times: “Much of the Latino civil rights, political and educational ecosystem will have to grapple with why they held up Chávez as a paragon of virtue for too long above others just as deserving and, as it turns out, nowhere near as compromised. In any event, the myth has been punctured.”
Chávez’s complexity was something I explored in the past and at times, defended. Regarding his immigration views, in 2021, I finally found a 1974 letter proving that he shifted his position and was not the anti-immigrant hard-liner the right tried to make him. I spent years making sure that history was accurate. And even though I was defending his views on immigration, and not defending him against allegations of rape, reading the three women’s accounts Wednesday still left me feeling like a fool.

The Chávez family released a statement that said, in part: “Our family is shocked and saddened to learn of news that our father, Cesar Chavez, engaged in sexual impropriety with women and minors nearly 50 years ago. As a family steeped in the values of equity and justice, we honor the voices of those who feel unheard and who report sexual abuse. This is deeply painful to our family.”
After an acknowledgement that his family has its own good memories of him, the statement said, “We hope these matters are approached thoughtfully and fairly.”
Chávez’s name adorns an untold number of streets, schools and parks in this country. His name should be removed from all of those places: every one.
“Everything should be named for the martyrs of the farm workers movement,” Huerta told Latino USA. “Every name should be named after them.”
By Thursday, California had already begun the process of changing César Chávez Day, March 31, to Farmworkers Day.
In that same Latino USA interview, Huerta said it was the courage of women such as Murguia and Rojas who gave her the courage to speak out now.
I used to see Chávez as a hero, but now I realize that our greatest heroes are the ones who speak out even if it means revealing their own pain. What Huerta did was brave, and it is no surprise that she has received an outpouring of love and support. She did not have to say a word. She could have kept her silence, and she would still be loved and admired. Instead, at 95 years old, she chose truth over mythology. That’s the most radical act of love for a community there is.
Julio Ricardo Varela is the founder of “The Latino Newsletter” and co-editor of “Pressing Issues from Free Press.”
The Dictatorship
Fired FBI agents claim ‘improper acts of political retribution’ by Trump administration
Former FBI agents allege they were illegally fired for having worked on an investigation that led to President Donald Trump’s indictment in the 2020 election interference case.
In a new lawsuit filed Thursday in Washington, two ex-agents said their constitutional rights were violated by “improper acts of political retribution.”
The civil suitbrought by plaintiffs proceeding under pseudonyms (John Does 1 and 2), names FBI Director Kash Patel, Attorney General Pam Bondi, the FBI and the Justice Department as defendants.
It’s the latest legal responseto the second Trump administration’s revenge campaign, which has included firing people who did their jobs probing potential crimes that happened to include the actions of the once and future president.
“Based merely on Plaintiffs’ involvement in an investigation implicating then-former President Trump initiated during the Biden Administration, Defendant Kash Patel, Defendant Pamela J. Bondi, and elected officials with whom they acted in concert perceived Plaintiffs to be politically disloyal to President Trump and therefore targeted Plaintiffs for removal,” the former agents alleged in their complaint.
They said their firings were illegal because they were based on the perception that they weren’t Trump supporters.
They’re seeking a court declaration that their rights were violated, as well as immediate reinstatement with protection from further action against them without due process. They said they were fired without evidence, notice or the opportunity for a hearing.
The government defendants will have an opportunity to respond in court.
The election interference case was one of two federal prosecutions brought against Trump. The DOJ stopped pursuing both cases after his 2024 election win, due to the department’s policy against prosecuting sitting presidents.
Jordan Rubin is the Deadline: Legal Blog writer. He was a prosecutor for the New York County District Attorney’s Office in Manhattan and is the author of “Bizarro,” a book about the secret war on synthetic drugs. Before he joined MS NOW, he was a legal reporter for Bloomberg Law.
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