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(DCNF)βNumerous elected Democratic officials have criticized the wealthy despite taking funding from billionaires in the past.
Railing against billionaires has been a popular Democratic rhetorical device for decades, but the criticism has come to the forefront since Elon Musk took the lead of the Department of Government Efficiency and has made many substantial governmentΒ changesΒ in President Donald Trumpβs administration.Β
Though there is a long list of Democratic officials who have condemned the ultra-rich, here are just seven high-profile Democrats who have recently made anti-billionaire statements despite having accepted support from billionaires in the past.
Democratic Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren
Democratic Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren has criticized billionaires throughout her career, making policies on taxing the wealthy a staple of her political campaigns. Since 2019, Warren has even sold mugs branding the words βbillionaire tearsβ for $28 on her campaignβsΒ website. When she beganΒ sellingΒ them in 2019, they were $25.
Despite her strong anti-billionaire sentiments, Warren accepted funding from at least 30 billionaires from 2011-2019, according to a New York PostΒ reviewΒ of her campaign donations.
WarrenΒ postedΒ on X during President Donald Trumpβs presidential run that he βpromisedβ his βrich as hell donorsβ tax cuts that wonβt βhelp working people one bit.β
On Feb. 12 WarrenΒ toldΒ Rolling Stone that Trump is trying to βdistractβ people from his βfailure to cut costs for familiesβ and that he is βplay[ing] up to the billionaires.β
George and Alex Soros, Facebook COOΒ Sheryl Sandberg, Susan Pritzker, wife of Hyatt heir Nicholas Pritzker II, Christopher Sacca, a venture capitalist who went on βShark Tank,β GitHub founder Tom Preston-Wernerβs wife, Theresa, andΒ David Geffen, co-founder of DreamWorks and many more all donated thousands of dollars to Warrenβs presidential and senatorial campaigns, according to the New York Post.
Former President Joe Biden
Former President Joe Biden began his presidency calling for βunityβ in his inaugural address butΒ left officeΒ warning that an βoligarchyβ was βtaking shape in America of extreme wealth, power, and influence that literally threatens our entire democracy β in his farewell speech.
BidenΒ tookΒ funding from at least 230 billionaires during his 2020 presidential campaign, which amounted to 25% of Americaβs billionaires at the time, according to Forbes. Trump received money from only 14% of American billionaires that year.
Bidenβs menagerie of ultrarich backers included George Soros, Ralph Lauren, Mellody Hobson, wife of George Lucas, Eric Schmidt, former CEO at Google, the founders of companies like DoorDash, Patagonia, and Netflix, as well as the family heirs to the Walmart fortune. Some billionaire donors gave a few thousand dollars, and others gave up to 1.7 million.
Forbes noted that at least 60 Biden donors also gave to some of Bidenβs super-PACs, Facebook cofounder Dustin Moskovitz contributing $47 million, and Mike Bloomberg rolling out $100 million.
Biden alsoΒ presentedΒ his billionaire donor George Soros the Presidential Medal of Freedom last month, along with Hillary Clinton and Denzel Washington.
Iβm so grateful my father was honored for his lifetime of work devoted to freedom and human rights. It was humbling to be with such an astounding group of honorees. Especially poignant to be alongside Bono andΒ @HillaryClinton, two of the people my father has the highest regardβ¦
Iβm so grateful my father was honored for his lifetime of work devoted to freedom and human rights. It was humbling to be with such an astounding group of honorees. Especially poignant to be alongside Bono and @HillaryClinton, two of the people my father has the highest regardβ¦ pic.twitter.com/Vx3KrQ4ELj
β Alex Soros (@AlexanderSoros) January 5, 2025
βI love Bernie, but Iβm not Bernie Sanders. I donβt think 500 billionaires are the reason why weβre in trouble,β BidenΒ saidΒ in 2018 at the Brookings Institution. βThe folks at the top arenβt bad guys. I get in trouble in my party when I say wealthy Americans are just as patriotic as poor folks. Iβve found no distinction.β
Democratic Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison
In a videoΒ postedΒ to X on Feb. 5, Democratic Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison repeated former President Joe Bidenβs βoligarchβ claim. He concluded the video with a call to action, βthe small, tiny little group of oligarchsΒ thatΒ are trying to destroy our democracy, we can stop them if we band together. We are the many, they are the money and we can overwhelm them.β
In 2018, EllisonΒ acceptedΒ $100,000 from Alex Soros, George Sorosβ son and business successor, according to the Washington Free Beacon. This amount represents a little less than half of funds raised by an independent expenditure committee devoted to Ellisonβs campaign success.
With one of Americaβs greatest leaders and a dear friend, Minnesota Attorney General @keithellison. pic.twitter.com/pdcncF6174
β Alex Soros (@AlexanderSoros) August 17, 2022
Alex Soros, like his father, is a left-wing billionaire philanthropist. βHeβs a lot more on the fringe than his dad was,β Joseph Vazquez, associate editor and George Soros expert at the Media Research Center told the Daily Caller News Foundation. βHeβs going to be a much more potent political threat.β
Vazquez said that Alex Soros might use his fatherβs business like βa wrecking ball,β and that he may βtake that $32 billion empire and smash it against wherever he needs to in order to turn his fatherβs vision into reality.β
Vazquez and Tom Olohan outline why Alex Soros βcould be even worseβ than his father in an MRC specialΒ reportΒ titled βMeet the New Boss.β The authors conclude in the report that Alex Soros might be βmore radical than his father on everything from abortion to climate change to the weaponization of race to demonize his political opponents.β
Ellison was one of the several democratic officials that filed a federal lawsuit against TrumpβsΒ executive orderΒ banning child sex-changes. HeΒ saidΒ in a statement on Feb. 7 that βour children deserve so much better than to be targeted β¦ by the President of the United States and his billionaire cronies,β pointing to how child sex-changes are βevidence basedβ and this executive order is βmean-spirited and deeply hurtful.β
Democratic Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar
Democratic Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar recentlyΒ jokedΒ about Trump being βfor sale,β though records show she has accepted funding from at least 21 billionaires.
βWhat is the difference between Greenland and Donald Trump? Greenland is not for sale,β Klobuchar said at the Washington Press Club Foundation Annual Congressional Dinner, according to the Huffington Post.
During Klobucharβs 2020 presidential campaign sheΒ acceptedΒ donations from 15 billionaires and 6 of their spouses, including LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman, according to a Forbes analysis of federal election findings.
DNC Chair Ken Martin
Newly-elected Democratic Party Chair Ken Martin has contributed to this anti-billionaire narrative multiple times. βTrump and the billionaire cabinet β¦ bought this country,β heΒ wroteΒ on X on Feb. 7. George SorosΒ gaveΒ at least $250,000 to Martinβs Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor (DFL) party in 2022, according to the Center of the American Experiment, a Minnesota-based think tank.
βAre we on the side of the robber baron, the ultra-wealthy billionaires, the oil and gas polluter, the union buster, or are we on the side of the American working family?β MartinΒ askedΒ the DNC crowd during his acceptance speech on Feb. 1.
On Jan. 19, while Martin was still a DNC Chair candidate, he went on record saying he will only take money from βgood billionairesβ going forward.
Leading Democratic Party Chair candidate Ken Martin says that Democrats wonβt take money from βthose bad billionairesβ but will take money from βgood billionairesβ pic.twitter.com/dkJbzM2Xss
β Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) January 19, 2025
Former Vice-President Kamala Harris
Former Vice-President Kamala HarrisΒ critiquedΒ the Washington Post and the LA Times for not endorsing her 2024 presidential run and suggested that her opponent only cares about βbillionaires in Donald Trumpβs clubβ during a podcast appearance with Charlamagne tha God.
A total of 83 billionairesΒ supportedΒ Harrisβ presidential campaign,Β according to a Forbes FEC filings analysis.
Notable Democratic PAC backers included George Soros, Laurene Powell Jobs, Gordon Getty, as well as Bill Gates, who donated $50 million.
Itβs time for us all to unite around Kamala Harris and beat Donald Trump. She is the best and most qualified candidate we have. Long live the American Dream!
![]()
#Harris2024 pic.twitter.com/KG09YnWHZK
β Alex Soros (@AlexanderSoros) July 21, 2024
Democratic California Rep. Nancy Pelosi
Democratic California Rep. NancyΒ wroteΒ on X on Feb. 10 that βRepublicans are enabling financial predators to rip off hardworking Americans to reward their billionaire donors.β
The Golden State Representative isΒ tiedΒ to House Majority Forward, a dark money nonprofit that received $3 million from Swiss billionaireΒ Hansjorg WyssΒ in 2020, according to Fox.
Pelosi has received much criticism for her own high net worth over her career, as some estimates rank her as one of the wealthiest members of congress.
Many have suspected that Pelosi, along with her husband, Paul Pelosi, have participated in insider trading. Paul Pelosi hasΒ refutedΒ these claims.
BONUS: Independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders
Independent Vermont Sen. Bernie SandersΒ announcedΒ plans to fight βthe oligarchyβ on Feb. 12. His spokesperson Anna Bahr told Politico that Sanders will support βworking-class peopleβ while βDonald Trump and Elon Musk march us toward authoritarianism, oligarchy, and kleptocracy.β
The Washington Free Beacon reported the senatorβs change in rhetoric from critiquing both βmillionaires and billionaires,β until dropping the βmillionaireβ once he became one in 2019.
Federal filings show that Sanders received just under $500 from one billionaire donor, Marta Thoma Hall, the wife of billionaire Velodyne founder David Hall in 2019. After ForbesΒ notifiedΒ Sandersβ campaign, they claimed they wouldnβt keep the money.
βMost Americans should believe that as a citizen, youβre allowed to attempt to influence the political process,β Brian Doherty, Los Angeles Times bestselling author and senior editor at libertarian magazine Reason told the DCNF. βYouβre allowed to have your voice.β
Doherty expressed skepticism regarding this anti-billionaire narrative.Β βI donβt think the democrats complaining about Elon Musk really have a political objection to β¦ billionaires funding political causes,β Doherty said. βItβs a rhetorical red herring.β
Doherty added that when voters are βaware of the range of really rich people funding both parties and both causes,β they are likely to βlose that sense of angerβ regarding wealthy donor influence.
The offices of Warren, Ellison, Pelosi, Martin, Harris, Klobuchar, Newsom and Sanders did not respond to the DCNFβs request for comment.
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