"I think China needs to stop interfering in the internal affairs of the United States because our treatment of Hong Kong is an internal matter," says @marcorubio.
.@JoeSquawk: Is @elonmusk still happy that he bought Twitter? Does he feel like he took one for the team?
"Of course," says @PalantirTech Co-Founder @JTLonsdale. "He's fighting to save Western civilization."
"I don't like how Trump said things, but he wasn't wrong about those critical issues. That's why they're voting for him. People should be more respectful of our fellow citizens," says @jpmorgan CEO Jamie Dimon. "I think this negative talk about MAGA will hurt Biden's campaign."
.@TheEconomist is endorsing Kamala Harris for president. "We have editorials every week advising politicians around the world on what to do," says Editor in Chief Zanny Beddoes. "So it would be weird for us not to put that together and offer our assessment of a candidate."
"I came back to him because, honestly, what I learned is his instincts are so good," says Colony Capital Founder & @realDonaldTrump ally Tom Barrack on his continued involvement in the campaign for this election:
"@elonmusk's reputation is in danger," says @axios Business Reporter @hopeking. "All of the macro conditions are against his favor. Market-share for $TSLA is down year-over-year. His reputation with Twitter is impacting his reputation when it comes to all of his companies."
"[Harris] has no role in this process," says @GovRonDeSantis. "All the storms I've dealt with under this administration, she has never called in Florida or offered any support. She's trying to inject herself into this because of her political campaign."
"I look at it as a champion lion and a champion cheetah coming together," Tom Barrack says of @elonmusk's political involvement. "Elon is probably the most important innovator, creator, manufacturer, product creator. He single-handedly did more than NASA could do in 20 years."
"Kamala Harris is pro-business," says @mcuban. "She's talked more about entrepreneurs and helping them have access to investment than any president that I've ever heard."
"Crypto has come from nowhere to be a force in the market ... it's here to stay. Cryptocurrency is not going away," The Carlyle Group's David Rubenstein #bitcoin. "The idea that the government is going to stop cryptocurrency from being something investors want is unrealistic."
"As an American citizen, I think it's in the best interest of the country for Trump to be the president versus Kamala Harris - and if it causes harm to a company I have an investment in, so be it," says @BillAckman of Trump's criticisms of $GOOGL: