The White House Chief of Staff said there was “no plan” to demand a crackdown on their hatred.

WASHINGTON - President Donald Trump will not call billionaire Elon Musk on Friday after the public attack, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles said.

"There is no plan today," Wells told NBC News during a report by Politico, and White House aides arranged to call the billionaire Tesla CEO on Friday in an attempt to patch up the matter between the two men.

A senior White House official told NBC News that Trump was not interested in the phone.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump focused on "a big bill" of Musk's wasted Republican domestic policy bill, which triggered their depravity. "That's his mentality when he left the Oval Office yesterday," she said.

"There could be anything - I want to lower a very unfortunate situation. But there is no phone call for these books, at least not for now."

The White House is taking the hatred seriously: White House aides held at least two closed-door meetings Thursday to develop social media barrage on whether and how to deal with Musk. Vice President JD Vance was at Trump at the beginning of the tweet and they spoke several times on Thursday, a person familiar with the matter said. The person said Trump encouraged Vance to diplomacy against Musk if asked.

Meanwhile, Trump is considering selling or giving away the red Tesla he bought in March, according to senior White House officials. The official added that the president is still weighing his options and has not made a final decision.

The spit started Thursday when Trump criticized Musk's recent attack on Republican policy measures because its estimates increased the deficit and turned into a full-scale explosion that allowed ripples to be launched through the stock price of Congress and Tesla.

"I'm very disappointed because Elon works better internally than almost anyone sitting here," Trump told Oval Office reporters at a bilateral meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.

"I'm very disappointed with Elon," Trump said. "I've helped Elon a lot."

Trump advised Musk to call the Republican bill "an annoying abomination" earlier this week, which cuts tax credits implemented by the Biden administration to inspire electric car purchases.

Musk denied that he was well-knowledged about the legislation.

"Error, the bill has never even been shown to me once, and passed so quickly in the death of the night that few people in Congress could read it!" Musk wrote in an article on X.

The two men insulted each other on their social media platforms Thursday for the rest of the day—X and Trump’s Musk and Truth socializing.

Musk posted more than 40 criticisms of the Republican tax bill on X on Thursday and responded to Trump's comments.

In a series of posts and comments, Democrats are cautious about whether opposition to Musk will ultimately help them stop Trump’s efforts to legislate tax and spending.

D-Conn. "This will have some impact, but Republicans are more afraid of Trump than Musk," said Senator Richard Blumenthal. Although he added that Musk's disapproval "has credibility for their objections, especially debt and deficits."

Vance defended Trump in a post on Thursday night X, saying: "President Trump has done more in my life than anyone else to win the trust of the movement he leads. I'm honored to be by his side."

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.

Johnson also postponed Musk's claim that he was responsible for the Republican victory in November.

"Elon was a big contributor to the last election, but it was the effort of the entire team," Johnson said. "I mean, President Trump is his generation, the most important politician in modern American history. He is the one responsible for it. But we all work hard. We delivered the House majority."

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, chairman of the House Subcommittee, focused on the work of the Ministry of Efficiency, said Musk's behavior "behavior is unnecessary."

"Do I like the price of it? No. I agree with Elon," she said, speaking of the big bill recently passed by the House, and Green voted in favor. “I don’t like its price tag, but I’m able to look at every aspect of the bill and I don’t have to argue with anyone.”

Meanwhile, other Republicans tried to avoid conflict and remain neutral.

“There is a good passage in the proverb: ‘Keep Fighting’,” R-Neb. Rep. Don Bacon told NBC. "I'll stay away from this."

Gabrielle Khoriaty,,,,, Julia Iser,,,,, Monica Alba,,,,, Peter Nicholas,,,,, Scott Wong,,,,, Kyle Stewart,,,,, Ruian Noble,,,,, Garrett Haake and Henry Gomez contribute.