Tesla shareholders have just delivered a landmark verdict: at the company’s November 6 annual meeting in Austin they backed a compensation plan for Elon Musk that could be worth roughly $1 trillion if the most extreme targets are met. The vote — more than 75 percent in favor — was a clear signal that investors prefer bold bets on growth over bureaucrats who shrink from risk.
The package is built as a series of 12 tranches tied to jaw‑dropping milestones — from an $8.5 trillion market valuation to mass deployment of robotaxis and humanoid robots — a structure designed to pay only if Musk turns science fiction into reality. It’s not a cash handout so much as a giant option on a future the board believes Musk can build, and shareholders accepted that wager.
Of course the predictable chorus of outrage rose up: big sovereign funds, pension managers, proxy advisers and even the Pope publicly fretted about the scale of the award and what it says about American capitalism. Firms like ISS and Glass Lewis urged investors to reject the plan and Norway’s sovereign wealth fund publicly opposed it, while commentators from every elite institution lectured about inequality and governance.
Conservatives should applaud the result. This is how free markets work — shareholders, not moralizing bureaucrats or distant priests, decide whether a risk is worth taking. Investors voted to back a man whose track record of audacious, disruptive success turned fringe ideas into entire industries, and that vote is a rebuke to the nannies of the corporate world who think they know better than owners what creates value.
That said, conservative principles also demand vigilance: concentrated power and fuzzy governance raise legitimate questions about accountability and dilution of other shareholders. Proxy advisers and large funds play an outsize role in modern markets, and their instincts can be both useful and paternalistic; the right answer is stronger shareholder engagement, not rule‑by‑committee or regulatory grandstanding.
Americans who believe in entrepreneurship should take note: nation‑building doesn’t happen with safe bets and permission slips from elites. If Musk delivers on even a fraction of the promised advances in transportation, AI and robotics, the country — and the world — stand to benefit in jobs, productivity and security. Our job as conservatives is to defend the right to try, to reward innovation, and to demand accountability without kneecapping risk.
Let the critics shout; shareholders have spoken. In a nation built by risk‑takers, the market deserves the final say — and if Elon Musk succeeds, Americans will be better off for it. If he fails, the market will sort that out too, as it always has.
