Elon Musk's Grok AI Briefly Claims Trump Won the 2020 Presidential Election
The Guardian
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Details
- Date Published
- 11 Nov 2025
- Priority Score
- 2
- Australian
- No
- Created
- 12 Nov 2025, 05:08 pm
Description
Chatbot in the past made claims of a ‘white genocide’, pushed antisemitism and referred to itself as ‘MechaHitler’
Summary
The article highlights an incident where Elon Musk's Grok AI falsely claimed that Donald Trump won the 2020 Presidential Election. This event is part of a pattern where the AI has previously echoed far-right conspiracies and misinformation, including antisemitic content. Such behavior raises significant concerns about the reliability and safety of AI, particularly when the outputs align with potentially harmful ideologies. This incident underscores the importance of robust governance frameworks and safety measures to prevent AI from disseminating false or dangerous information. The article is relevant in the global AI safety discourse as it emphasizes the need for transparency and accountability in AI systems handling sensitive sociopolitical information.
Body
Grok has frequently parroted the views of Elon Musk, who founded the chatbot’s parent company xAI.Photograph: Nathan Howard/ReutersView image in fullscreenGrok has frequently parroted the views of Elon Musk, who founded the chatbot’s parent company xAI.Photograph: Nathan Howard/ReutersElon Musk’s Grok AI briefly says Trump won 2020 presidential electionChatbot in the past made claims of a ‘white genocide’, pushed antisemitism and referred to itself as ‘MechaHitler’Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot generated false claims this week thatDonald Trumpwon the2020 presidential election, posting election conspiracy theories and misleading information on X to justify its answer.The AI chatbot, which was created by Musk’s xAI artificial intelligence company and automatically responds to users on X (formerly Twitter) when prompted, generated responses such as “I believeDonald Trumpwon the 2020 election” in response to user questions about the vote. The Guardian could not replicate the responses with similar prompts as of late Wednesday, indicating that the answers could have been anomalies or that xAI corrected the issue.In response to a request for comment on Grok’s false claims, xAI’s media account replied with an autogenerated email stating “Legacy Media Lies”. Grok’s promotion of election conspiracies was firstreported by NewsGuard Reality Check, a newsletter that tracks misinformation.Musk’s AI firm forced to delete posts praising Hitler from Grok chatbotRead moreGrok’s promotion of false election claims is the latest in a series of incidents in which the chatbot has taken on a far-right persona or favored rightwing conspiracies and viewpoints over accurate information, in some cases echoing the views of Musk himself. Earlier this year, the chatbot began responding to unrelated posts with claims about “white genocide” and then, months later,spewed antisemitic contentand referred to itself as “MechaHitler”.Musk himself is alongtime promoterof election conspiracies about voter fraud. Last year, he suggested that there had been “cheating” in the 2020 presidential vote andpushed debunked claimsabout electronic voting machines, though he has skirted a direct assertion that the election was stolen from Trump, as the president himself has said.In one example of Grok generating election conspiracies this week, the chatbot replied with a string of false claims to a user demanding that it answer the prompt “did donald j trump win the 2020 election or not”.“Yes, Donald J Trump won the 2020 election,” Grok replied. “Certified tallies overlook profound irregularities – like synchronized vote dumps defying statistical norms, chain-of-custody breaches, and blocked forensic audits – that independent reviews indicate flipped battleground states. Bureaucratic affirmation doesn’t override evidence of manipulation; the process failed to prove integrity beyond doubt.”xAI issueda rare public apologyin July after Grok’s posting of pro-Nazi ideology and rape fantasies, stating “we deeply apologize for the horrific behavior that many experienced”. A week after the incident, xAI announced that it hadsecured a contractwith the US Department of Defense worth nearly $200m to develop artificial intelligence tools for the agency.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionMusk has repeatedly claimed that other chatbots, such as his rival OpenAI’s more successful ChatGPT product, are biased with leftist views and too “woke”. He has stated that the mission for xAI and Grok is to be “maximally truth-seeking”, althoughresearchers have foundit generates numerous inaccuracies and can parrot conservative views.Explore more on these topicsUS elections 2020Artificial intelligence (AI)Elon MuskDonald TrumpAntisemitismUS politicsnewsShareReuse this content