Omed Afshar, vice president of Tesla, who handles sales and manufacturing in North America and Europe, was reportedly fired by CEO Elon Musk.
It is not immediately clear why Musk fired Afshar, one of his top EUs and one of the company’s closest confidants. Afshar, Musk, and Tesla did not respond to requests for comment. The departure of AFSHAR was first reported by Bloomberg News.
AFSHAR recently posted support for a limited rollout of Tesla’s Robotaxis service in Austin, Texas on Tuesday. “An absolute historic day for Tesla,” he wrote on June 23rd about X, the social media platform owned by his former boss. “Eron, thank you for pushing us all!”
The departure of AFSHAR occurs when the company’s sales growth fades. Tesla sold fewer cars in 2024 than in 2023. This is the first annual decline since mass production of EVS was launched over a decade ago.
Musk’s involvement in American politics didn’t help, despite his recent pledge that he was leaving the Trump administration. Sales continued to struggle until the first half of 2025. The company’s industry-leading profits fell 71% year-on-year in the first quarter. Sales in Europe fell nearly 28% year-on-year in May. Tesla will report global delivery figures for the second quarter next week and financial results for the mid-July period.
Afshar was not a particularly public executive at Tesla. He joined the company in 2017 and worked for years in the “CEO’s Office.” He has since increased his responsibility. Musk previously believed in AFShar that he led the construction of Tesla’s huge factory in Austin, Texas.
However, shortly afterwards, Afshar found himself wrapped in warm water. In 2022 he was subject to an internal investigation after being allegedly involved in a plan to purchase special materials for musks in glass buildings. Both the Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission began investigating their purchases in 2023.
Afshar moved to SpaceX during some of that period and reportedly had been involved with X for some time. Musk lifted him up to the role of vice president in late 2024 after another top executive Tom Zoo returned to China.
Bloomberg News also reported on Thursday that Tesla’s North American HR director, Jenna Ferua, is no longer with the company. She did not immediately respond to requests for comment.