PULSE POINTS:
❓What Happened: Elon Musk pledged to reduce his time working for the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) after Tesla’s net income plummeted 71 percent to $409 million, its least profitable quarter since 2020.
👥 Who’s Involved: Elon Musk, Tesla CEO and Trump advisor; Donald J. Trump, 45th and 47th U.S. President.
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📍 Where & When: Musk spoke on an earnings call on April 22, 2025, following Tesla’s Q1 results.
💬 Key Quote: “Probably in the next month, my time allocation to DOGE will drop significantly.” — Elon Musk.
⚠️ Impact: Musk’s shift in focus may stabilize Tesla amid boycotts and tariff-related losses, but his MAGA ties risk long-term damage to the brand’s appeal among liberal consumers.
IN FULL:
Tesla owner Elon Musk has announced plans to significantly cut back on his role in President Donald J. Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) after the electric car company reported a 71 percent drop in net income to $409 million for the first quarter of 2025—the least profitable quarter since 2020. Sales fell nine percent to $19.3 billion, missing market expectations, as Tesla grapples with boycotts from left-leaning consumers and the impact of President Trump’s trade tariffs on its supply chain. “Probably in the next month, my time allocation to DOGE will drop significantly,” Musk said on an earnings call Tuesday evening, signaling a pivot back to Tesla’s core business.
Musk’s involvement in the Trump administration has alienated liberal electric vehicle (EV) buyers. Tesla believes “Changing political sentiment” and a 13 percent drop in vehicle deliveries in Q1 reflect a boycott by Democrat-voting Americans and European markets. Tesla’s stock, down 40 percent from its December peak despite a five percent post-earnings rally, reflects investor unease.
Musk’s alignment with the administration has also sparked aggressive attacks on Tesla vehicles and showrooms and even customers, with every Tesla owner being doxxed by hackers in March.
Meanwhile, Tesla faces fierce competition, having been overtaken by China’s BYD as the top electric vehicle producer in 2024.
Musk is betting on futuristic ventures to revive Tesla, including a self-driving taxi service set to launch in Austin, Texas, by June and production of the Optimus humanoid robot later this year. However, skeptics like Gordon Johnson of GJH Research doubt these ventures will yield profits for five to ten years, if ever. “Even the ‘Tesla faithful’ are beginning to lose patience,” Johnson warned.
PULSE POINTS:
❓ What Happened: Col. Ricky Buria, a former aide to Biden-era Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, has resigned from the Marine Corps and is reportedly transitioning into a senior civilian role under Trump-world Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, with consideration for the coveted chief of staff position. Buria, a recent Democrat donor, is the source of major concerns in Trump world.
👤 Who Was Involved: Ricky Buria, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, outgoing Chief of Staff Joe Kasper, former Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Democratic congressional candidate Mike O’Brien, and former DoD official Anne Powers.
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🧾 Key Quote: “Ricky was only the [Senior Military Assistant] because he was the only guy standing,” a defense official told Defense News.
⚠️ Fallout: Officials inside the Department of Defense and the White House have raised concerns about Buria’s close ties to the previous administration.
📌 Significance: The personnel move highlights unresolved tensions surrounding staffing and loyalty inside the Pentagon’s top ranks.
IN FULL:
Col. Ricky Buria, a former junior military assistant (JMA) to Lloyd Austin, is reportedly in line for a senior civilian advisory position under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, according to multiple defense officials. Buria began terminal leave from the Marine Corps last week and is even under consideration for the role of chief of staff following the departure of Joe Kasper, according to numerous sources familiar with the matter.
But Buria was first appointed to the Pentagon in April 2024 under the Biden government. After Hegseth’s confirmation, Buria remained in place–a “holdover”–while other senior staff were dismissed. He temporarily filled the position of acting senior military assistant (SMA).
“Ricky was only the SMA because he was the only guy standing,” an official told Defense News.
In recent months, Buria has accompanied Hegseth on official travel and participated in high-level meetings. On a recent trip to Panama, Buria was present for discussions with the Panamanian government regarding canal access. He also joined a bilateral meeting in Washington with El Salvador’s Minister of Defense, seated two chairs away from the secretary.

Multiple officials say Buria has taken on expanded responsibilities beyond those typical of a junior military assistant, including personnel input and attendance at foreign policy briefings.
Additionally, campaign finance data uncovered by The National Pulse shows that Buria made a donation in 2023 via ActBlue to Democrat Mike O’Brien, a former Marine and candidate in Pennsylvania’s 10th Congressional District. O’Brien was endorsed by VoteVets–a left-wing group that claims President Trump “hates veterans,” and has attempted to destabilize his Department of Defense using the now-infamous “Signal group chat” story as a cudgel. The group even publicly called for Hegseth to be fired.
Buria has maintained relationships with former Biden-era Pentagon staffers. In a LinkedIn comment, former Department of Defense official Anne Powers publicly referred to Buria as her “partner in crime,” while he heaped praise on others and vice versa.

The White House personnel office is reviewing Buria’s transition to civilian service. Approval is required for senior advisory appointments.
Buria was promoted to colonel in fall 2024. Under standard requirements, officers must serve two years at a given rank to retire at that grade. Without a waiver, he is expected to retire as a lieutenant colonel.
Four top officials have departed Hegseth’s team in recent days. The staffing turnover has left a gap in senior leadership, which Buria is currently helping fill, much to the chagrin of many across the Trump administration.
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