Key Points
- Elon Musk has promised to give away millions of dollars to swing state voters ahead of November’s US election.
- Musk has so far contributed $112 million of his vast fortune to support Donald Trump’s presidential campaign.
- Legal experts raised concerns about the legality of Musk’s cash payments, which may violate federal US law.
Elon Musk has promised to give away $US1 million ($1.5 million) each day until November's US election to someone who signs his online petition, with the first prize awarded at a PAC event supporting Republican Donald Trump, raising questions about the legality of the payments.
Musk gave a million-dollar cheque to an attendee of his America PAC event in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, aimed at rallying supporters behind presidential candidate Trump. The winner was a man named John Dreher, according to event staff.
"By the way, John had no idea. So anyway, you're welcome," the Tesla founder said as he handed Dreher the check.
The money is the latest example of Musk using his extraordinary wealth to influence the tightly-contested presidential race between Trump and his Democratic rival, vice president Kamala Harris.
Musk, ranked by Forbes magazine as the world's richest person, so far has supplied at least $US75 million ($112 million) to America PAC, a political action committee he founded in support of Trump's presidential campaign.
Forbes says Musk is worth about US$247 billion ($367 billion). This is based largely on his shares in his electric vehicle company Telsa.
The group is helping mobilise and register voters in battleground states, but there are signs it is having trouble meeting its goals.
Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro said on Sunday on NBC's Meet the Press program that Musk's plan to give money to registered voters in Pennsylvania is "deeply concerning" and "it's something that law enforcement could take a look at".
Questions about the legality of these cash payments abounded on Saturday night, as election law experts pointed to various provisions in US federal law that prohibited making cash payments to voters.
It is a federal crime to pay people with the intention of inducing or rewarding them to cast a vote or to get registered, an offence punishable by prison time.
The prohibition covers not only monetary expenditures, but also anything of monetary value like liquor or lottery chances, a justice department election-crimes manual says.
The Harrisburg event was the third in as many days in Pennsylvania, where Musk is painting November's election in stark terms and encouraging supporters to vote early and get others to do the same.
He said on Saturday that if Harris wins, it will be: "the last election".
He also said the two assassination attempts against Trump prove he is ruffling feathers and upending the status quo.
The petition Musk is asking people to sign reads: "The First and Second Amendments guarantee freedom of speech and the right to bear arms. By signing below, I am pledging my support for the First and Second Amendments."
The entrepreneur behind carmaker Tesla and rocket and satellite venture SpaceX has increasingly supported Republican causes and this year became an outspoken Trump supporter.
Trump in turn has said if elected he would appoint Musk to head a government efficiency commission.
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