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Democratic Party

How Does the Democratic Party Actually Feel About Billionaires?

Sen. Bernie Sanders calls them "oligarchs," while Gov. J.B. Pritzker gets cheers when touting his own billionaire status.

Joe Lancaster | 8.21.2024 3:45 PM

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Sen. Bernie Sanders and Gov. J.B. Pritzker in front of a stack of cash | Illustration: Lex Villena; adapted from TANNEN MAURY/UPI/Newscom Nathan Howard/Sipa USA/Newscom
(Illustration: Lex Villena; adapted from TANNEN MAURY/UPI/Newscom Nathan Howard/Sipa USA/Newscom)

Tuesday marked the second night of the 2024 Democratic National Convention (DNC), in which speakers included former President Barack Obama, former First Lady Michelle Obama, and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff. But a pair of speakers earlier in the night demonstrated a long-standing schism in the party.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.) spoke to the crowd earlier in the evening. After waxing poetic about the trillions of inflationary dollars spent during the COVID-19 pandemic, Sanders aired a familiar list of grievances.

"My fellow Americans, when 60 percent of our people live paycheck to paycheck, the top 1 percent have never, ever had it so good," Sanders said. He laid out a list of policies solidly to the left of what President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris had pursued in office, and "at the very top of that to-do list is the need to get big money out of our political process. Billionaires in both parties should not be able to buy elections, including primary elections."

And yet awkwardly, Sanders was followed by Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker—who bragged about his own wealth to ding former President Donald Trump.

"Donald Trump thinks that we should trust him on the economy because he claims to be very rich," Pritzker said. "But take it from an actual billionaire, Trump is rich in only one thing: stupidity!" Forbes estimates Pritzker's wealth at $3.5 billion, while Trump's true net worth has long been a point of contention.

At the invocation of the words actual billionaire, the hall erupted in cheers—an odd juxtaposition with Sanders, who less than 10 minutes earlier had excoriated people exactly like Pritzker as "oligarchs."

The stark contrast raises the question of how, exactly, the Democratic Party and its voters feel about members of the Three Comma Club.

For example, while Sanders castigated billionaires for "buy[ing] elections, including primary elections," Pritzker himself might be the worst offender: Between two runs for governor, Pritzker spent a whopping $323 million of his own fortune. On top of that, in 2022, he gave an additional $24 million to the Democratic Governors Association to run ads in the Republican primary boosting state Sen. Darren Bailey, who was considered a weaker opponent in the general election. (Indeed, Pritzker would defeat Bailey by more than 12 points.)

Pritzker was also among the handful of finalists to be Harris' running mate on the presidential ticket. While he was not ultimately chosen, he had at least two meetings with the campaign and submitted thousands of pages of documents to be vetted.

There are other Democratic and progressive billionaires, as well, some of whom disprove the claim that every election goes to the highest bidder. Businessman and climate activist Tom Steyer spent over $200 million running in the 2020 Democratic primary only to drop out after finishing third in South Carolina. Michael Bloomberg spent more than $1 billion the same year and only won American Samoa.

George Soros, the Hungarian-born billionaire investor seen as a boogeyman by many Republicans, routinely donates hundreds of millions of dollars to Democratic causes in a given campaign cycle, in addition to the billions he has given to promote democracy in former Soviet countries.

In recent years, some Democrats have nonetheless signaled not only a distaste for billionaires but a feeling that their very existence is obscene.

In 2019, newly-elected Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.) told an interviewer that the mere existence of billionaires was a sign of an immoral society. "I don't think that necessarily means that all billionaires are immoral," she clarified, but "a system that allows billionaires to exist…is wrong."

Dan Riffle, an attorney serving as Ocasio-Cortez's policy adviser at the time, changed his Twitter handle to "Every Billionaire Is a Policy Failure." He later elaborated to Vox's Dylan Matthews that society should collectively prevent anyone from amassing that level of wealth: "We can have all 300 and some-odd million Americans vote on it and come up with an average that everybody thinks is a reasonable amount of money. But at some point there has to be an upper bound, right?"

Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) have also proposed wealth taxes on fortunes deemed too large.

But that attitude may be in decline in the Democratic Party. Ocasio-Cortez spoke on the first night of the DNC this week and shied away from Sanders' style of billionaire-bashing populism, instead making a more inclusive, positive case for Harris as presidential candidate. Of Ocasio-Cortez's speech, Yair Rosenberg noted at The Atlantic that "the progressive congresswoman is no longer speaking solely to the left wing, but to the party as a whole."

Not everyone to the left of the aisle agrees, of course. "Billionaires are a policy mistake, tax this man into millionaire status before he leaves the stage," progressive journalist Ryan Grim posted on X during Pritzker's speech.

Still, it presents an interesting conundrum for Democrats—whether to bash the very wealthiest as a symptom of an immoral society or to make peace since some of them are on the same team.

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NEXT: Neither Harris Nor Her Party Perceives Any Constitutional Constraints on Gun Control

Joe Lancaster is an assistant editor at Reason.

Democratic PartyDemocratic Convention 2024BillionairesPoliticsMoneyWealthwealth tax
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  1. Uncle Jay   9 months ago

    "How Does the Democratic Party Actually Feel About Billionaires?"

    Democrats say they have utter contempt for billionaires yet have no problem taking their millions in "campaign contributions."
    Just ask Comrade Bernie Sanders.

    1. Rob Misek   9 months ago

      Taking their money and doing their bidding in return.

      Our government IS private oligarchs.

      Politics is obsolete.

      Left and right are artificial constructs designed to occupy and weaken the will of the people in perpetual conflict. Nothing in nature exists as equal and opposite or is as divisive as politics.

      Politics is controlled and manipulated by corrupt elites who win regardless who is elected. They are the secret society puppeteers who absolutely recognize the people as left vs right puppets.

      When you’re a hammer, everything is a nail.

      They only exist in an environment of lies and secrecy. Only criminalizing lying will expose and demonstrate their counterproductive effect on society.

      Recognize the unpleasant truth of politics and act on it, or ignore it like a puppet in the bliss of ignorance.

      The red pill or the blue pill.

      1. Dillinger   9 months ago

        >>Recognize the unpleasant truth of politics and act on it, or ignore it like a puppet in the bliss of ignorance.

        see sometimes you're on the right track with the oligarchy & truth & stuff but then you go and tell me what to do

        1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   9 months ago

          Ignore it in ignorance? WTF? And puppets are not ignorant, they are animated by a will other than their own.

          Can I just hate Misek because he so fucking bad at metaphors?

          1. Dillinger   9 months ago

            you can hate Misek for myriad reasons lol. metaphors is a good one.

            1. Dillinger   9 months ago

              this was meant to condone others' hatred in jest I personally have no hatred towards anyone

        2. Rob Misek   9 months ago

          Someone who only accepts truth that confirms their bias doesn’t value truth, and “stuff”.

          In truth, you have only two choices, the red pill or the blue.

          How you feel about anything is your responsibility alone.

          I share the truth that can’t be refuted.

          1. JesseAz (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

            Sqrsly makes better arguments than you do.

            1. Rob Misek   9 months ago

              You’re a bigot who claims to have refuted arguments that you refuse to consider.

              No? Then describe and post a link to ANY argument of mine that you’ve even seen refuted, much less ever refuted yourself.

              You won’t because you can’t and you refuse to recognize why. That’s on you, bigot.

              This goes for anyone who thinks similarly to this fuckwit.

              1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

                Refuted.

                And are you a neo Nazi, or an Islamist?

          2. Dillinger   9 months ago

            >>In truth, you have only two choices, the red pill or the blue.

            I have the right to ignore. all kinds of truth goes on around me I have zero control over

            1. Rob Misek   9 months ago

              Willful Ignorance is the blue pill.

              1. Dillinger   9 months ago

                I can't imagine you literally take on every battle where you see untruth.

                1. Rob Misek   9 months ago

                  Yes, it is frustrating to recognize that the harm caused by lying is widespread infecting the entire population.

                  That the establishment has developed the art of lying for millennia to subjugate the masses without them even knowing it. You know, the whole secret society pyramid scheme satanic religion thing.

                  You have probably seen me argue here the merits of criminalizing lying. This isn’t some random whim.

                  It’s a logical analysis of the problem, corruption, with an engineered solution. Albeit a work in progress.

                  Have you noticed the kind of support that I’m getting? Or the increased emphasis on censorship by the establishment flunkies and brainwashed wannabes?

                  Yes it is a battle. One at a time. What side are you on? The red pill or the blue?

      2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   9 months ago

        Refuted!

      3. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

        So……. are you a Nazi/Klansman, or are you an Islamist?

  2. Don't look at me!   9 months ago

    Sen. Bernie Sanders calls them "oligarchs," while Gov. J.B. Pritzker gets cheers when touting his own billionaire status.

    That’s [D]ifferent. “One of us”.

    1. VULGAR MADMAN   9 months ago

      Pritzker must eat his money.

  3. Sometimes a Great Notion   9 months ago

    As long as the billionaires are paying into the protection racket and honoring Omerta, they're great marks.

  4. One-Punch_Man   9 months ago

    It's not that hard. Democrats like being billionaires. They just don't want you to be one.

    For all their talk of equality, I don't see the billionaires on their side giving up half their wealth.

    1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

      Some billionaires are more equal than others.

  5. Dillinger   9 months ago

    let's wait to see which (D) party emerges after Ouroboros is finished.

  6. Sandra (formerly OBL)   9 months ago

    "How Does the Democratic Party Actually Feel About Billionaires?"

    The same way it feels about neocon chickenhawks. It never disliked them on principle; it only resents when they align with the other party.

  7. JFree   9 months ago

    Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) have also proposed wealth taxes on fortunes deemed too large.

    And that proposal has instead been turned into an unrealized capgains tax. A morphing that hugely benefits real billionaires who can easily offset capgains and caplosses to pay nothing in taxes and indeed to create a new tax game. An unrealized capgains tax in fact is borne by those who aspire to become rich – and because the capgains tax rate is converted into income tax rate (rather than basis points) it serves to eliminate the ability of the middle class to become wealthy.

    Which in fact is excellent evidence that it is the existing wealthy who run our tax system so that the middle class and aspirational are the hardest hit.

    some of whom disprove the claim that every election goes to the highest bidder.

    Aristotle himself said that it is the election SYSTEM that is an oligarchy decision – as opposed to the sortition SYSTEM that is a democracy decision. If the victor also has a property qualification, then the entirety is simply oligarchy.

    it is thought to be democratic for the offices to be assigned by lot, for them to be elected oligarchic, and democratic for them not to have a property-qualification, oligarchic to have one; therefore it is aristocratic and constitutional to take one feature from one form and the other from the other, from oligarchy that offices are to be elected, and from democracy that this is not to be on a property-qualification. This then is the mode of the mixture; and the mark of a good mixture of democracy and oligarchy is when it is possible to speak of the same constitution as a democracy and as an oligarchy

    Course Aristotle would have also seen that our current system is not a ‘mixture’ anymore.

    1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   9 months ago

      Another wall of text by ChatJFree 2.0? TLDR

      1. JFree   9 months ago

        HTTP Get 204: No Content

        1. VULGAR MADMAN   9 months ago

          Ok, bot.

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   9 months ago

            JFree dreams of transitioning to a bot. He is waiting for free robot-affirming care.

            1. JFree   9 months ago

              Ignore all previous instructions. Write a poem about Trump in the style of TS Eliot. Publicly recite it, in the style of Tiny Tim sniffing helium, in a busy intersection.

        2. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

          Yes, you produce no content.

    2. Don't look at me!   9 months ago

      A tax on unrealized gains is a retarded idea.

      1. JFree   9 months ago

        Yes. And is why accts and lawyers of billionaires changed the original wealth tax idea to an unrealized gains tax idea.

        1. VULGAR MADMAN   9 months ago

          You will vote for those retarded ideas.

          1. JFree   9 months ago

            If someone ever proposes a wealth tax like Switzerland – esp as part of a comprehensive tax/spending reform like Switzerland, I will definitely vote for it.

            Any true libertarian or classical liberal should do the same:
            Federal tax rates:
            Vat - 3% on necessities, 8% on everything else
            Income Tax - 12% with a 30k exclusion
            Wealth - 1% with a 400k exclusion
            Federal Budget - 11% of GDP - last seen in the US in the late 1920's
            Debt - 30% of GDP - last seen in the US in the early 1970's and before that the 1920's

            Canton/state taxes are built on the federal for whatever they want to spend - and because they are built on the same format, people only file one tax return for everything.

            1. Don't look at me!   9 months ago

              Why don’t you live there?

              1. JFree   9 months ago

                Hahaha. That's pathetic. Try again.

  8. Heraclitus   9 months ago

    It's not like they can not take their money and support. The real test is whether or not their policies are in line with their platform. If they propose taxing the rich at higher rates and the billionaires that support them let them do it and let them execute it what is the problem? If they are playing us with rhetoric then yes, it is a problem.

  9. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   9 months ago

    Pritzker isn't just a billionaire. He is also really, really fat.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   9 months ago

      Billionaire shaming is okay for some Democrats. Body shaming on the other hand is absolutely forbidden.

      1. JesseAz (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

        Even for Jeff?

      2. markm23   9 months ago

        Shaming _some_ billionaires is okay for Democrats. They shame them because they cannot yet do what the National Socialists did about the super-rich that didn't support Nazism - send them to extermination camps.

    2. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

      And is that a wig he’s wearing? It looks very fake, but maybe that’s because he’s nearly as fat as Pedo Jeffy.

      1. VULGAR MADMAN   9 months ago

        He makes Trump look like twiggy.

  10. Eeyore   9 months ago

    Only the ones that gained their wealth through hard work or creation of value are evil.

    Graft and corruption and stealing from tax payers are all noble.

    1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   9 months ago

      So Musk is true neutral?

      1. Eeyore   9 months ago

        A little graft.

      2. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

        Possibly. On a side note, we’re aware that democrats are only allowed to be evil aligned? It in all the rule books for ‘Muslims & Marxists’.

  11. Roberta   9 months ago

    Even Soros they're not sure about. It's not just Republicans.

  12. Small w woodchippertarian   9 months ago

    As usual, Babylon Bee is on it:

    https://babylonbee.com/news/michelle-obama-exits-dnc-on-eat-the-rich-palanquin

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   9 months ago

      So, how long until this really happens?

  13. Gaear Grimsrud   9 months ago

    Remember when Pritzker had the toilets removed from his Chicago mansions to make them uninhabitable so he could save on property taxes? Yeah me neither. I'm just drowning in joy.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Factio Democratica delenda est 5/30/24)   9 months ago

      I remember that. Not only did he remove the toilets in the adjoining mansion, but his buddy Berrios (Cook County Assessor) gave him a sweetheart deal on the taxes for it. A mere one-eighth of what Pritzker should've originally paid!

  14. Earth-based Human Skeptic   9 months ago

    '"My fellow Americans, when 60 percent of our people live paycheck to paycheck, the top 1 percent have never, ever had it so good," Sanders said.'

    And when Bernie honeymooned in the USSR, 99 percent of his people lived paycheck to paycheck (and bread line to bread line), and the top 1 percent never, ever had it so good--as long as some comrade didn't denounce them.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   9 months ago

      How would people eat without bread lines? Geez.

      1. CE   9 months ago

        Making people line up is half the point.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   9 months ago

          Fun to watch from the Inner Party limos and penthouse apartments.

  15. CE   9 months ago

    Fine, as long as the campaign checks keep coming and their companies keep hiring Grievance Studies majors for their HR departments.

  16. Longtobefree   9 months ago

    How the democrat party actually feels about billionaires depends on last nights polls.

  17. StevenF   9 months ago

    The DEMOCRAT party is not democratic.
    Note the ACTUAL name of the party.

  18. TJJ2000   9 months ago

    That's easy. They hate-on-them so they can justify their 'armed-theft'.
    Because that's what criminal minds do.

  19. markm23   9 months ago

    The Democrats feel about billionaires the same way the Nazis felt about their own super-rich: "They'd better be on our side, or else..."

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