Tuesday, March 25, 2025
Year : 2, Issue: 30
Gothamist: As Elon Musk slashes spending and targets federal agencies, his once popular electric carmaker Tesla is taking a beating. Protests have erupted at dealerships across the country, including in New York City; Tesla owners are selling off their cars and the stock price is plummeting.
Justin Brannan, a Democratic City Council member who’s running for city comptroller, is vowing to aim another dagger at the company if elected — by leading an effort to have the city pensions divest completely from Tesla holdings worth an estimated $1.2 billion.
“Elon Musk is coming for us,” Brannan told Gothamist in an interview. “Why should we be investing retirees’ hard-earned pension funds in a guy who’s already shown that he’s got New York City in the crosshairs?”
Brannan is facing off against Mark Levine, the Manhattan borough president, in what is expected to be a competitive Democratic primary in June. One of three citywide elected positions, the comptroller performs audits of city agencies and serves as the custodian for five public pension systems valued at over $274 billion — the third largest pension system in the country.
Brannan, who chairs the council’s finance committee, said Musk had already hurt the city. At the urging of the billionaire Trump ally, the government last month clawed back $80 million in Federal Emergency Management Agency funding meant to cover housing costs for migrants.
Brannan also cited the recent order to cut 7,000 jobs from the Social Security Administration. At the end of the month, the agency plans to eliminate phone service for those who want to apply for or make changes to their benefits, which Brannan argued would endanger the financial security of tens of thousands of city retirees who rely on Social Security payments. With little relief coming from Congress and limited success in the federal judiciary, opponents of Musk’s actions have turned to financial pressure on his electric car company. Brannan pointed to Tesla’s volatile stock price, which has fallen nearly 40% this year but experienced a surge on Monday amid news that the Trump administration may scale back tariffs.