Ex-Trump aide: Elon Musk's failure 'could get in the way' of his relationship with Trump
Elon Musk gestures onstage as he attends the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland, U.S., February 20, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan Howard

Last night, the biggest loser in Wisconsin wasn't Brad Schimel, the far-right conservative running for the state Supreme Court seat, the co-hosts of "The View" argued on Wednesday. The biggest loser was tech billionaire Elon Musk, who spent over $25 million trying to elect Schimel, Newsweek calculated.

"You know inflation is out of control when you can't buy an election for $20 million," joked Joy Behar.

However, former White House communications director Alyssa Farah Griffin wondered if losses like this would impact Musk's relationship with President Donald Trump.

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"What Elon Musk did — he may have actually motivated people against voting with the Republicans," Griffin said.

"If you come in days before, slap on a cheesehead hat and say, I'm going to buy this election, they don't like that and I think that there could be some implications here," she continued. "I've been saying I don't think the Trump/Elon Musk relationship will last long. This could get in the way."

Griffin explained that Trump "likes winning," and "having a clean record of people he's endorsed. And this shows that Elon Musk doesn't get it when it comes to politics."

See the clip below or at the link.