New Delhi:
Elon Musk has once more endorsed Indian-American US presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, making it clear who the Tesla boss would like to see as the following chief to run America.
Mr Ramaswamy, 38, posted 10 bullet factors on Mr Musk’s X, previously Twitter, about his political and world view. A number of the factors embody observations like “God is actual, there are two genders, human flourishing requires fossil fuels, an open border isn’t any border”.
Reposting the presidential candidate’s submit, Mr Musk wrote, “He states his beliefs clearly.”
He states his beliefs clearly. https://t.co/SjpuXLCFpo
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 18, 2023
Earlier too, Mr Musk had known as the Indian-American politician “a really promising candidate”.
Mr Ramaswamy, a tech-entrepreneur who graduated from Harvard and Yale, was born to Indian dad and mom who migrated to the US from Kerala.
Up to now, Mr Musk has backed former US President Donald Trump’s rival Ron DeSantis, who used a Twitter Areas occasion to announce his candidacy for the presidential race.
Mr Ramaswamy together with Nikki Haley and Hirsh Vardhan Singh are the three Indian-People contesting in opposition to former Mr Trump for the highest job in January.
Mr Ramaswamy’s provocative rhetoric has heated up the US Republican major contest.
Whereas some candidates are starting to purpose their hearth at Mr Trump, the 38-year-old Indian-American has moved towards the entrance of the chasing pack by inserting himself firmly within the frontrunner’s slipstream.
“I feel I am finest positioned to advance our America First agenda, take it even additional than Trump did, but additionally unite the nation within the course of,” the multimillionaire biotech entrepreneur just lately informed public broadcaster PBS.
Mr Ramaswamy trails Mr Trump by a seemingly unbridgeable hole, however he has spent thousands and thousands of his personal cash in his bid to be finest positioned ought to the presumptive nominee fall by the wayside amid his rising tangle of authorized issues.