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Musk survives Royal Society expulsion; EU tasked to detail public funding to SpaceX, Tesla
Musk survives Royal Society expulsion; EU tasked to detail public funding to SpaceX, Tesla
by AFP Staff Writers
London (AFP) Mar 4, 2025

Tech billionaire Elon Musk has survived calls for his expulsion from the Royal Society following a crunch meeting at the elite British science institute.

However, the roughly 150 members in attendance vowed to combat "misinformation and ideologically motivated attacks" on science following Monday's closed-door talks.

It came after more than 3,000 people including Nobel prize winners signed an open letter last month saying X owner Musk had broken the Society's code of conduct by promoting "unfounded conspiracy theories".

Founded in 1660, the Royal Society describes itself as a "fellowship of many of the world's most eminent scientists" and is a key voice in the global scientific community.

Past members have included Albert Einstein, Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, Dorothy Hodgkin, Benjamin Franklin and Stephen Hawking.

Musk, the owner of SpaceX and Tesla as well as social network X, was elected a fellow in 2018.

Researchers say changes Musk made to X after his 2022 takeover of the site formerly known as Twitter have led to a spike in misinformation.

The 53-year-old Musk has also repeatedly used his own account to spread falsehoods including inaccurate claims about Covid-19, vaccines, miscarriages and heart problems.

Before the meeting, the Society said members would discuss "the principles around public pronouncements and behaviours of fellows".

The institute, which has 1,800 fellows and foreign members including 85 Nobel laureates, told AFP on Tuesday that "all Fellows are listed on our website" -- where Musk's profile still stands.

It added in a statement that at the meeting, the fellows agreed to step up efforts to defend "science and scientists at a time when these are under threat as never before".

"Concern was expressed, in particular, about the fate of colleagues in the US who are reportedly facing the prospect of losing their jobs amid threats of radical cutbacks in research funding," it said.

Musk now holds increasing sway in the White House as a close advisor to US President Donald Trump, and has been given sweeping powers to slash spending and overhaul government.

Stephen Curry, author of the open letter and professor of structural biology at Imperial College London, had said the debate was "not about policing political views".

"I think the main charges that are troubling to many people is that Elon Musk has not shown respect for evidence," he said.

"He's widely reported to be one of the most active disseminators of misinformation on Twitter and that's not something that is consistent with the code of conduct."

Ahead of the debate, Musk had said "only craven, insecure fools care about awards and memberships".

EU asked to say how much funding given to Musk firms
Brussels, Belgium (AFP) Mar 5, 2025 - The EU faced questions on Wednesday over how much of its money goes to tech billionaire Elon Musk's companies as tensions ramp up between the new US administration and Brussels.

US President Donald Trump has criticised the European Union, claiming it was "formed in order to screw the United States", and has threatened the bloc with higher tariffs.

One of Trump's biggest allies is Musk, whose social media platform X faces an EU probe. Musk has accused the EU of censorship with its content moderation rules.

German Green EU lawmaker Daniel Freund sent a letter on Tuesday to the European Commission, the bloc's executive arm, asking for "a detailed list of EU funding allocated to companies owned or controlled by Elon Musk" over the past five years.

The businesses named included SpaceX, Tesla, X, Neuralink, The Boring Company, xAI and "any other relevant entities linked" to Musk.

Freund said he wanted details of "grants, tenders, subsidies" including any money spent on advertising on social media platforms owned or controlled by him.

"Trump's MAGA crowd including Musk have the clear aim to weaken or even destroy the EU. So we should have a very close look at the EU funding we provide to them," Freund told AFP on Wednesday.

"For me it's clear: the EU should not give millions to people that want to destroy it."

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Britain's Royal Society will hold a crunch meeting on Monday following calls to expel technology billionaire Elon Musk, the world's richest man, from the prestigious institute of scientists. Founded in 1660, the Royal Society describes itself as a "fellowship of many of the world's most eminent scientists" and is a key voice in the global scientific community. Past members have included Albert Einstein, Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, Dorothy Hodgkin, Benjamin Franklin and Stephen Hawking. But ... read more

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