Extract from ABC News
Analysis
Elon Musk has been a frequent fixture at the Trump White House, as head of the Department of Government Efficiency. (Reuters: Kevin Lamarque)
Tesla's sales plummet, and why Elon Musk is partly to blame (David Chau)
Alienation in an alien nation
A UK activist group called Everyone Hates Elon has owned up as the force behind the bus shelter posters, depicting Musk as a throwback to 1939.
Operating under the mantra of "Let's Make Billionaires Losers Again", the group has struck a chord with many in the community.
Many major industrialists, at some time in their career, have been the subject of ridicule and protest from groups such as the Occupy movement.
Activists protest cuts to US government agencies by Elon Musk outside SpaceX facility in California. (Reuters: David Swanson)
While made to briefly feel uncomfortable, most weathered the storm with their business and wealth intact, as the protesters were ideologically and socially in a separate universe.
This time around, the protests look to be gaining traction among the mainstream.
Musk's customers generally have been well off but left-leaning.
Tesla was positioned as a revolutionary champion in the corporate march for a clean and green planet with Musk as a visionary leader in the quest for lower carbon emissions.
Not only were Tesla cars high performance, quality vehicles, their owners saw themselves as early adopters of the push towards electrification and a rejection of a fossil fuelled past.
Musk's emergence as a right-wing warrior has alienated many of his loyal customers, to the point that even investment bankers, like Saxo Bank's global head of investment strategy Jacob Falkencrone, are wondering how much more damage he will do to the company.
"His increasingly vocal political stances and erratic behaviour have alienated some traditional buyers.
"Investors are asking whether Musk's personal brand is starting to weigh on Tesla's business," Falkencrone said.
Some Australian Tesla owners have printed their own bumper stickers. (Supplied: David Gillard)
Then there is his relationship with Trump.
On the surface, the pair appear to have little in common — Trump doesn't believe in climate change, has no time for electric vehicles and is completely opposed to American industry manufacturing offshore, and particularly in China.
Musk caters to a world that sees climate change as an existential threat and produces electric vehicles in Texas, Nevada, Shanghai, Berlin and Mexico.
Who is selling out?
Tesla has a strong connection to Australia — or, at least, to an Australian.
The company's chair is Robyn Denholm, once a senior executive of the similarly named Telstra.
Tesla chair Robyn Denholm has been selling down her holding in the automaker. (Supplied: Tesla)
In the past few months, she has been dumping Tesla shares by the electric truckload.
As of Friday, she has offloaded more than $US117 million worth of Tesla stock, adding to the woes brought on by the onslaught of poor sales and production announcements, and Musk's self-inflicted damage.
She was already under pressure.
A director for more than decade, she has chaired the company since 2018 and served on the company's compensation committee which, controversially, granted Musk a $US56 billion pay deal shortly after she ascended to the top.
Last year, a Delaware court judge ruled against the pay deal and questioned the independence of the board.
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