Ashley St. Clair posted an 18-minute TikTok video saying she had private conversations with Elon Musk about his satellites, the 2024 election and data he claimed showed Donald Trump had won before official counts were complete. In the video, she said Musk described his Starlink satellites as "10,000 lasers in space" and called them his "anomaly in the matrix."
St. Clair also said she joked to Musk, "I would ask more but I really don’t want to be deposed," and said he replied, "very wise." She alleged that Musk forwarded her internal America PAC data and "real-time delta vote metrics," then texted her on election night: "yeah I knew hours ago that Trump won, my team has the best real-time data anywhere."
She said the messages came after Musk left Mar-a-Lago early on election night in 2024. In the TikTok, she also said, "First of all, how the f**k do you have real-time data on elections? I could not understand that, I don’t know that I ever will."
The claims are resurfacing now in a new video even though the underlying conspiracy theory about an orbital satellite plot to interfere with the election was not substantiated. Musk backed Trump’s reelection through America PAC, a $171 million super PAC, but the allegation that he used satellites to meddle with the vote was debunked in late 2024 by the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public and PolitiFact.
That makes St. Clair’s latest account less a new disclosure than another attempt to revive a theory that has already been knocked down. The harder question is not whether she believes the messages were real; it is why a debunked election meddling claim is being pushed back into the spotlight now, with Musk and his role in the race again under scrutiny.

