Musk and Trump unite again as relationship warms, this time for Grok to help manage federal properties

President Donald Trump and Elon Musk are seemingly back on track to rekindle their relationship, after the administration announced it would be using the billionaire’s AI chatbot Grok for the management of federal properties.

In a press release Thursday, the U.S. General Services Administration announced a major partnership with Musk’s xAI – “Grok for Government” – making the company’s AI models accessible to federal agencies for $0.42 per organization.

The “unique offer” will stretch for 18 months until March 2027 and is the longest term for such an agreement, the GSA said. The deal includes access to Grok 4 and Grok 4 Fast, xAI’s advanced reasoning models.

It comes just less than four months after the explosive bust up between Trump and Musk in June, which culminated in a fiery online exchange, with both men slinging insults at each other from their respective social media platforms, Truth Social and X.

Trump and Elon Musk are seemingly back on track to rekindle their relationship, after the administration announced it would be using the billionaire’s AI chatbot Grok for the management of federal properties

Trump and Elon Musk are seemingly back on track to rekindle their relationship, after the administration announced it would be using the billionaire’s AI chatbot Grok for the management of federal properties (AP)

But the pair was recently pictured chatting and shaking hands at the funeral of MAGA commentator Charlie Kirk in Arizona. Trump later did not appear particularly moved by the meeting, but told reporters it was “nice” Musk had attended.

On Thursday, any real animosity appeared to be in the past, with Musk declaring: “Thanks to President Trump and his administration, xAI’s frontier AI is now unlocked for every federal agency empowering the U.S. Government to innovate faster and accomplish its mission more effectively than ever before,”

“We look forward to continuing to work with President Trump and his team to rapidly deploy AI throughout the government for the benefit of the country.”

In a press release Thursday, the U.S. General Services Administration announced a major partnership with Musk’s xAI – ‘Grok for Government’ – making the company’s AI models accessible to federal agencies for $0.42 per organization

In a press release Thursday, the U.S. General Services Administration announced a major partnership with Musk’s xAI – ‘Grok for Government’ – making the company’s AI models accessible to federal agencies for $0.42 per organization (AFP/Getty)

xAI cofounder Ross Nordeen added “We will work hand in glove with the entire government to not only deploy AI, but to deeply understand the needs of our government to make America the world leader in advanced use of AI.”

The company will also deliver introductory training programs, custom enablement over time, and work with agencies to facilitate secure integration, the GSA press release said.

“Widespread access to advanced AI models is essential to building the efficient, accountable government that taxpayers deserve – and to fulfilling President Trump’s promise that America will win the global AI race,” said Federal Acquisition Service Commissioner Josh Gruenbaum. “We value xAI for partnering with GSA – and dedicating engineers—to accelerate the adoption of Grok to transform government operations.”

The announcement comes under four months after the explosive bust up between Trump and Musk in June, which culminated in a fiery online exchange, with both men slinging insults at each other from their respective social media platforms, Truth Social and X

The announcement comes under four months after the explosive bust up between Trump and Musk in June, which culminated in a fiery online exchange, with both men slinging insults at each other from their respective social media platforms, Truth Social and X (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Speaking to Fox News Digital, Gruenbaum added that xAI “stood out” as a strong partner that offers “world class technical talent” in the AI race between the U.S. and China.

“This technology could be as transformative as the internet, maybe more,” Gruenbaum said. “Right now, we’re in the human-augmentation phase, but soon agents will be able to handle tasks more independently.”

The agreement between xAI and the government is effective immediately, and federal agencies can begin leveraging the benefits of Grok AI models through GSA’s established procurement channels, the GSA said.

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

He Does Know Bad Ratings

As Jimmy Kimmel gets back into the swing of things, his regularly scheduled jokes about President Donald Trump have resumed. On Wednesday’s episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, following a major viewership boost for ABC, the comedian predicted Trump will “try to sue” the network after he posted about the episode “moments after we taped our

Trump demands UN inquiry over ‘triple sabotage’

Donald Trump has demanded an investigation into what he called a “triple sabotage” during his visit to the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday. In a post on social media, the US president referred to an escalator abruptly stopping as he and First Lady Melania Trump stepped on, a teleprompter malfunctioning during his speech, and

Von der Leyen opens crucial hotline to Trump – POLITICO

Once the reporter finished her question on the the GPS jamming, Trump continued: “Nobody knows where it came from, but they did take away her ability to use the phone.” He added: “You know, sometimes that’s a good thing. Sometimes if it happened to me, I’d be very happy.” Beneath the joke, he was unexpectedly au

Trump claims UN sabotage with escalator, teleprompter

U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump arrive for the 80th session of the UN’s General Assembly (UNGA) on Sept. 23, 2025 in New York City. Alexi J. Rosenfeld | Getty Images President Donald Trump on Wednesday said that he was the victim of a “triple sabotage” at the United Nations a day

China’s President Xi Jinping announces new climate goal to cut emissions by 2035

China has committed for the first time to not only stop increasing carbon emissions, but to actually cutting them by 7 to 10 per cent by 2035, a move that reinvigorates the global emissions reductions push, even as the United States withdraws from the Paris climate change agreement. Outlining China’s new carbon targets in a