Elon Musk and Mark Cuban are hitting the campaign trail with very different approaches

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Mark Cuban and Elon Musk offered a study in contrasts as they went before swing state voters Thursday to make the case for their chosen candidates.

Both billionaires walked on stage with their phones prominently in hand but the similarities ended there.

Musk, the Tesla (TSLA) and SpaceX CEO and owner of social media platform X, had his phone present to broadcast a concurrent live X space and then proceeded to riff on a wide array of topics — from his case for voting early for Donald Trump to his thoughts on Israel to a recent SpaceX rocket capture.

Cuban, the entrepreneur and "Shark Tank" star, used his phone instead to read prepared remarks where he made a much more careful and focused economic case for Vice President Kamala Harris.

Mark Cuban, left, and Elon Musk appeared at dueling campaign events on Thursday (Photos: Getty images)
Mark Cuban, left, and Elon Musk appeared at dueling campaign events on Thursday. (Getty images)

The differences were emblematic of differing approaches to the final weeks seen across the two campaigns overall, as well as the very different roles these two billionaires are set to play in those final pushes.

And there was also a notable contrast in tone.

"Y'all here to have a little fun?" Cuban asked as he took the stage in La Crosse, Wis., before it was Harris's turn to speak. Cuban then slammed Trump's economic plans as "basically just gibberish."

Musk put things in much more stark terms.

"I'm politically active now because I think the future of America and the future of civilization is at stake," he said during his remarks in Folsom, Pa., just outside of Philadelphia.

Mark Cuban arrives to speak at a campaign rally for Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris at the University of Wisconsin La Crosse, in La Crosse, Wis., Thursday, Oct. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
Mark Cuban arrives to speak at a campaign rally for Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris at the University of Wisconsin La Crosse on Thursday. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

A study in contrasts

A Yahoo Finance analysis of the speeches and their transcripts put the differences in even sharper contrast.

Cuban, after a short introduction where he discussed his television appearances and partial ownership of the NBA's Dallas Mavericks, immediately turned to economic policy and largely stayed there.

He called the election a "battle for entrepreneurs" and focused on Harris's plan for small businesses as well as Trump's tariffs ideas for almost the entirety of the 12-minute speech.

Read more: What the 2024 campaign means for your wallet: The Yahoo Finance guide to the presidential election

In fact, outside of broader introductory and closing comments (and a brief foray into Trump's border wall) Cuban spent over 85% of his time on economic topics, according to the analysis.

Musk, by contrast, was far more wide-ranging and only touched on purely economic topics more fleetingly.

Elon Musk talks with a child as he speaks as part of a campaign town hall in support of Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump in Folsom, Pa., Thursday, Oct. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
Elon Musk brought up a young supporter as part of his town hall event. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

The event was more notable for moments like when Musk pulled a young member of the audience up on stage for a selfie, not to mention his repeating of debunked claims about Dominion voting systems and the 2020 vote. (The electronic voting company was paid $787 million by Fox News in 2023 after the channel made similar claims that were called defamatory).