By Kevin D. Williamson
Sunday, September 12, 2021
‘Toadies for billionaires” is how one excitable
correspondent describes the Republican Party.
But nobody seems to have told the billionaires.
Politics is not based on policy, or economics, or
analysis — politics is based on storytelling, and we typically are
far more committed to our stories than to any other aspect of our political
lives. (Oh, no, not you! You’re an enlightened philosopher–king. But that other guy.
. . .) We stick with our stories even when the facts on the ground have
changed.
The Republican Party was, for a long time, the business
party. Sometimes, that manifested itself in a principled commitment to free
enterprise and free markets, and sometimes it manifested itself as doling out
favors to Big Business. Often, Republican politicians were engaged in both at
the same time: Ronald Reagan was a champion of laissez-faire economics
but also imposed protectionist tariffs as a sop to his business allies, notably
Harley-Davidson.
But the commanding heights of the U.S. economy — Wall Street and, especially, Silicon Valley — are now
much more progressive-leaning and Democrat-friendly than they used to be, and
they are not at all bastions of conservative orthodoxy or Republican
partisanship. That change has been driven in part by cultural polarization:
While elite institutions, especially universities, have long been
Democrat-aligned, the cultural orientation of the Republican Party has become
increasingly rural, and not only rural but actively anti-urban,
anti-cosmopolitan, and anti-elite, with Republicans declaring themselves the
sworn enemies of everything from Hollywood to the Ivy League and, now, even
professional sports. Conservatives will protest that the Left has been the
cultural aggressor here, and that is true, but it doesn’t change the political
outcome: If you want to study at Harvard, work in technology, live in
Sausalito, and vacation in Aspen, you show up on the Republican radar as an
Enemy of the People. Sure, maybe you wouldn’t complain if your taxes were a couple
of points lower, but you don’t fit easily into the universe of Marjorie Taylor
Greene and Sean Hannity.
If you want to understand which is the billionaires’
party, then consult the billionaires.
Consider the 20 or so wealthiest Americans:
Jeff Bezos: The wealthiest American is
a mixed bag in terms of his political donations. In terms of
his public statements, he is scrupulously nonpartisan, though he has been generally
supportive of Joe Biden, including of Biden’s infrastructure proposals and his
plan to raise corporate taxes. People who know Bezos describe him as a Reason-style
libertarian — a free-market capitalist with socially progressive tendencies.
He is not a Donald Trump fan, and not exactly the poster
boy for the Republican Party in 2021.
Elon Musk: The eccentric Tesla founder has
approximately the politics of a 1990s college sophomore, calling himself
“socially liberal and fiscally conservative” and “half Democrat and half
Republican.” The experience of dividing his time between California and Texas
seems to be radicalizing him in Texas’s direction. But, for now, he donates to
both parties and commits himself to neither.
Bill Gates: The Microsoft founder has
financially supported a lot of Democrats and a few Republicans. He is
personally tight with the Obamas, but he also likes charter schools.
Philosophically, he is best described as a technocratic progressive. His
criticism of Trump’s coronavirus response made him a right-wing-hate totem.
Policy-wise, he is generally closer to Democrats than to Republicans.
Culturally, he is about as far away from the 2021 Republican Party as an
American can be.
Mark Zuckerberg: He has spread political
money around pretty promiscuously, tipping everybody from Chuck Schumer to
Marco Rubio. He publicly claims neither party. His wife supports Democrats
almost exclusively, with the exception of Chris Christie. He is not the
Republican billionaire you are looking for.
Warren Buffett: The fifth-wealthiest American
is a moderate Democrat. The kind of Republican he likes is
Michael Bloomberg, i.e., the kind of Republican who is a Democrat.
Larry Ellison: The Oracle founder has a
bipartisan giving history but went in big on Trump, possibly as part of a backdoor effort
to undermine Amazon. He is a registered Democrat.
Larry Page and Sergey Brin: The Google guys
are left-leaning and Democrat-supporting. Regarding Trump’s win in 2016, Brin
said: “As an immigrant and a refugee, I certainly find this election deeply
offensive.”
Steve Ballmer: He’s a major supporter of
Gabby Giffords’s gun-control organization and allied efforts, and a modest
supporter of Democratic candidates.
Assorted Waltons: The Waltons are a mixed
bag. The older generation was pretty much exclusively Republican, but Alice
Walton, who was a key ally of Hillary Rodham Clinton’s in 2016, supports
Democrats almost exclusively. Walton money also has found its way to the LGBTQ
Victory Fund, the Lincoln Project, and Planned Parenthood.
Michael Bloomberg: Bloomberg actually held
office as a Republican, but it is fair to say he was a Republican of
convenience. He ran for president in the 2020 Democratic primary. There’s a
story about pre-politics Donald Trump asking Bloomberg about his membership in
some exclusive club, to which Bloomberg replied: “Forget it, Don — you can’t
afford it.” He’s that kind of Democrat.
MacKenzie Scott: The former Mrs. Bezos is an
almost-cartoonishly committed progressive.
Daniel Gilbert: The Quicken Loans founder
supported Chris Christie and John Kasich in the 2016 primary. He has donated to
Democratic candidates, including Hillary Rodham Clinton, but leans Republican.
Phil Knight: While Nike was making ads
valorizing Colin Kaepernick, its founder was giving millions of dollars in
political donations, mostly to Oregon Republicans, as part of a fruitless effort
to elect pro-abortion Republican Knute Buehler as that state’s governor.
Charles Koch: The Wichita tycoon and
philanthropist is a libertarian-leaning Republican, perhaps not as socially
liberal as his late brother, David, but certainly someone who has tried to push
the GOP in a liberty-first direction on matters such as marijuana
decriminalization.
Julia Koch: The widow of David Koch makes a point of taking no interest in politics.
Michael Dell: Once a pretty solid Republican,
the Austin-based computer entrepreneur has emerged as a leading critic of Texas
Republicans’ voting-reform laws.
Miriam Adelson: Her late husband, casino
magnate Sheldon Adelson, was one of the most important Republican donors of the
past several years and a key ally of Donald Trump.
Len Blavatnik: The Ukraine-born Vladimir
Putin ally is a dual citizen of the United States and the United Kingdom, where
he is Sir Leonard. He is a very large donor to the Republican Party but also to
the campaigns of Chuck Schumer, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kamala Harris, and Joe
Biden.
The Martians: John and Jacqueline Mars, heirs
to the candy fortune, do not loom very large on the political landscape.
Jacqueline Mars is a supporter of the League of Conservation Voters; John Mars
has donated both to Democratic candidates and to Marco Rubio’s Reclaim America
PAC.
Leonard Lauder: The chairman emeritus of
Estée Lauder has in recent years been a generous supporter of Democrats ranging
from Andrew Cuomo to Dianne Feinstein, though most of his generosity has been
directed at organizations such as the Council on Foreign Relations and the
Aspen Institute. His brother, Ronald, is a Republican who served as ambassador
to Austria in the Reagan administration.
So, by my count, that’s a lot of billionaire Democrats
and billionaire Democrat-leaners, with the GOP claiming one or two Waltons,
Charles Koch, and the ghost of Sheldon Adelson. It is notable that when the
billionaires have supported Republicans, they have chosen mostly moderates such
as Kasich and Christie, or those who are positively socially liberal such as
Knute Buehler. David Koch was a supporter of gay marriage and abortion rights
and a patron of the New York City Ballet — hardly the stuff of a contemporary
Republican nationalist-populist. You won’t find many, if any, among these
billionaires who are full-spectrum conservatives, though you will find quite a
few who are up-and-down-the-line progressives, often unthinkingly so.
The fact is that the Democrats have grown very
comfortable and cozy with wealth, status, and power, and they don’t mind
enjoying the perks associated with those — they just don’t want to be witnessed
in the act, because so much of their political identity is tied up in
denouncing as greedy and selfish those in the high places they now occupy.
Put Chuck Schumer into a room with Mark Zuckerberg’s
bankroll and see what kind of sycophancy ensues. There are toadies for
billionaires in our politics, knots of them.
But they aren’t who you might think.
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