The tech entrepreneur sees a third party as a chance to break America’s entrenched two-party system. Such efforts have struggled in the past.
Elon Musk’s newly announced America Party has received an early endorsement from Andrew Yang, the tech entrepreneur and former Democratic presidential candidate who has himself championed efforts to break America’s entrenched two-party political system.
Yang, founder of the independent Forward Party, revealed in a July 7 interview with Politico that he has been “in touch” with Musk and his team to discuss the tech mogul’s fledgling third-party movement.
“I’m excited for anyone who wants to move on from the duopoly,” Yang told the outlet. “And I’m happy to help give someone a sense of what the path looks like.”
Yang later took to Musk’s social media platform X to publicly signal his support. “If it breaks the duopoly I’m all for it,” he wrote, while also sharing a Forward Party post encouraging new political movements to offer voters more choice.
If it breaks the duopoly I’m all for it.
— Andrew Yang🧢⬆️🇺🇸 (@AndrewYang) July 7, 2025
We welcome the growing realization that the two-party system isn’t working and that the majority of Americans want more choices and more accountability. It’s also an opportunity to reiterate that while Independent movements begun from the top down have had minimal long-term…
— Forward Party (@Fwd_Party) July 7, 2025
“We welcome the growing realization that the two-party system isn’t working and that the majority of Americans want more choices and more accountability,” the Forward Party statement reads, saying that independent political movements that begin “from the top down” have struggled to endure but those that are based on grassroots momentum tend to have a lasting impact.
Musk, who commands an enormous following on X, has leaned into the grassroots ethos by first putting the idea of launching a third political party to a vote among his tens of millions of users.
On July 4, he posted a poll asking whether Americans wanted independence from what he described as the “two-party (some would say uniparty) system” and whether he should establish the America Party. More than 65 percent of respondents backed the proposal, prompting Musk to declare the party’s formation the following day, calling it an effort “to give you back your freedom.”
Independence Day is the perfect time to ask if you want independence from the two-party (some would say uniparty) system!
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 4, 2025
Should we create the America Party?
Since then, Musk has outlined an initial strategy for the America Party focused on winning a handful of key congressional races to deny either Republicans or Democrats an outright majority. “One way to execute on this would be to laser-focus on just 2 or 3 Senate seats and 8 to 10 House districts,” he wrote on X, arguing that such a bloc could serve as a powerful swing vote to ensure that laws “serve the true will of the people.”
By Tom Ozimek