Elon Musk appoints new Twitter chief executive – but is yet to officially announce her

World

Elon Musk has announced he has found a new Twitter chief executive – but is yet to name her.

“Excited to announce that I’ve hired a new CEO for X/Twitter. She will be starting in ~6 weeks!” Musk said in a tweet on Thursday.

He added that his role within the company will transition to “exec chair and CTO, overseeing product, software and sysops”.

But having not named any prospective candidates, the mystery over who exactly the newly appointed chief executive is continues.

In December, the 51-year-old said he would resign as chief executive “as soon as I find someone foolish enough to take the job”.

This came after a poll on the social media site, where 57.5% of users voted for him to leave the position that he took on after buying the platform for $44bn (£35bn) last year.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


0:53

November 2022: Musk ‘must adhere’ to government rules on Twitter

Read more:
Twitter to finally cull ‘legacy’ blue ticks
Elon Musk says his dog is now Twitter’s CEO

Last month, Musk was reminded of the pledge during an impromptu interview on the BBC, where he said: “I did stand down. I keep telling you I’m not the CEO of Twitter, my dog is the CEO of Twitter.”

Since taking on Twitter, Musk has regularly made light of any controversies, but investors in Tesla have become increasingly concerned that he has been devoting too much time to turning around the platform.

Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

During his first two weeks in the job, he quickly fired Twitter’s previous chief executive, Parag Agrawal, and other senior leaders and then laid off half its staff in November.

In April, Twitter started to remove its blue ticks from verified accounts, leaving some of the world’s best-known figures without the verification sign.

The platform had about 300,000 verified users under the original blue tick system, many of them athletes, musicians, journalists and other public figures.

Articles You May Like

Hyundai recalls more than 145,000 EVs
UK on ‘slippery slope’ to ‘death on demand’, justice secretary warns ahead of assisted dying vote
Getaway driver jailed over murders of two teenagers who died in machete attack
Ørsted’s largest solar farm in the world is now online in Texas
How tech bros bought ‘America’s most pro-crypto Congress ever’