Elon Musk’s US$1 million voter giveaway winners are not picked at random, lawyer says

By South China Morning Post | Created at 2024-11-04 17:16:57 | Updated at 2024-11-05 03:23:43 10 hours ago
Truth

Elon Musk’s pro-Trump group does not choose the winners of its US$1 million-a-day giveaway to registered voters at random, but instead picks people who would be good spokespeople for its agenda, a lawyer for the billionaire said on Monday.

Musk lawyer Chris Gober was trying to persuade a Pennsylvania judge that the giveaway was not an “illegal lottery”, as Philadelphia district attorney Lawrence Krasner alleged in a lawsuit seeking to block the contest ahead of Tuesday’s US presidential election.

“There is no prize to be won, instead recipients must fulfil contractual obligations to serve as a spokesperson for the PAC,” Gober said in the hearing before Judge Angelo Foglietta.

 AFP / Getty Images / TNS

Musk, right, jumps on stage as he joins Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania last month. Photo: AFP / Getty Images / TNS

The hearing in the battleground state comes just one day before Democratic Vice-President Kamala Harris and Republican former president Donald Trump will square off in the tightly contested race. Musk and his political action committee are backing Trump.

Since October 19, Tesla CEO Musk has been giving a US$1 million check every day to a randomly selected voter who has signed his petition supporting free speech and gun rights. Musk became an outspoken Trump supporter this year and has promoted the former president on his X social media platform.

Krasner, a Democrat, sued Musk and his political action committee in state court on October 28 to try to block the giveaway, which he called an illegal lottery that violates state consumer protection laws.

A lawyer for Krasner’s office, John Summers, called Gober’s comments a “complete admission of liability”.

“We just heard this guy say, my boss, my client, called this random,” Summers said. “We promised people that they were going to participate in a random process, but it’s a process where we preselect people.”

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