Albuquerque Journal

PULLING the STRINGS

Philanthro­pist George Soros, the far right’s boogeyman, is again a target

- BY ADAM GELLER

NEW YORK — When pipe bombs turned up in the mail of Hillary Clinton and other prominent Democrats this week, the first recipient — billionair­e investor and liberal philanthro­pist George Soros — quickly fell out of the headlines.

But there’s no chance his many critics and enemies have forgotten him.

White nationalis­ts and others on the political fringes have long cast Soros as the supposed leader of a globalist Jewish plot to undermine white Christian civilizati­on. Now, President Donald Trump, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and other political leaders have brought the vilificati­on of Soros into the mainstream.

This year, Soros has been accused by critics including Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, of purportedl­y funding a caravan of Central American migrants marching toward the U.S. Others have charged him with hijacking a campaign by Florida high school students demanding gun control. Trump tweeted recently that women who confronted Republican senators about Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court were profession­al protesters, paid by Soros.

For many on the far right, Soros is “like the Jew behind the curtain, from their perspectiv­e, not just in the U.S., but all over the world. He’s the number one enemy of folks on the radical right,” said Heidi Beirich, director of the Intelligen­ce Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks U.S. hate groups. “The demonizati­on of sorts has been going for a while, but it has really hit sort of a fever pitch in the last three to four years.”

On Friday, investigat­ors arrested a south Florida man, charging him with carrying out the mail bomb scare, in which no one was hurt. The suspect, Cesar Sayoc, 56, maintained social media accounts promoting conspiracy theories about Soros.

The fact that Soros was a target seemed less a surprise than a logical progressio­n, Beirich said.

In an analysis of millions of anti-Semitic Twitter posts over the year that ended in January, the Anti-Defamation League found that Soros was among the most frequent targets.

Trump has tapped into those sentiments, and several Republican politician­s have followed his lead.

“For those who control the levers of power in Washington and for the global special interests, they partner with these people that don’t have your good in mind,” Trump said in the final ad of his 2016 campaign, featuring video of Soros and others.

In an interview last year with Vice News, Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Arizona, suggested that Soros had backed activists behind the 2017 white nationalis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia that turned deadly.

“Who is he? I think he’s from Hungary. I think he was Jewish and I think he turned in his own people to the Nazis. We better be careful about where we go with those,” Gosar said, repeating another right-wing myth about Soros’ past that has been debunked.

The 88-year-old Soros has given more than $32 billion to his Open Society Foundation­s to fund causes including free debate and government accountabi­lity. That spending has fueled countless conspiracy theories. Some of the depictions of Soros draw on bits of truth, while contradict­ing much of his life story.

“My father acknowledg­es that his philanthro­pic work, while nonpartisa­n, is “political” in a broad sense: It seeks to support those who promote societies where everyone has a voice,” the investor’s son, Alexander Soros, wrote this week in an opinion piece published in The New York Times.

“There is a long list of people who find that propositio­n unacceptab­le.”

Soros was born in Budapest in 1930. His family changed their last name from Schwartz to hide their religion from the Nazis, who slaughtere­d more than 500,000 Hungarian Jews. After World War II, a penniless, 17-year-old Soros left for England and eventually enrolled at the London School of Economics. He embraced the teachings of philosophe­r Karl Popper, whose ideas about how people interact in open societies helped shape Soros’ beliefs about the need for democracy, as well as the behavior of investors and financial markets.

Soros’ investment strategies and his aggressive­ness in acting on them made him one of the world’s most successful traders.

“It wasn’t that he was right more often about which way the dollar was going to go or which way the stock market index is going to go… but when he was right and he had conviction, he put on these enormous bets,” said Sebastian Mallaby, author of “More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite.”

Soros became known as the “Man Who Broke the Bank of England,” for wagering heavily against the British pound in 1992, betting that it was overvalued. When the pound fell sharply, as Soros predicted it would, he made an estimated $1 billion.

Soros moved to the U.S. in 1956 to take a job at a small New York brokerage. He got U.S. citizenshi­p and in 1969 helped launch the Quantum Fund, which delivered stellar returns over more than three decades. In 2011, he announced he was closing the fund to all but family members.

By then, he had become very active in philanthro­py, dating to the 1970s when he paid to help black students attend college in apartheid-era South Africa.

In 2014, Forbes estimated Soros’s fortune at $23 billion. But transfers to his foundation have reduced the money he now holds to $8 billion, making him the 190th richest person in the world, the magazine estimates.

“The three parts of George Soros are the philosophe­r, the speculator and the philanthro­pist/politician,” Mallaby said, “And they’re all animated by the same belief that you can trigger a cascading change if you are willing to bet enough money to kind of shock the system and start the change.”

In recent years, right-wing populist leaders in Eastern Europe have accused Soros of using his money to force liberal values and refugees on their societies.

While Soros has funded leftwing causes, many of his donations have also gone to causes like improving public health and transporta­tion. Hungary’s Orban was among those who benefited. He received scholarshi­ps from Soros in the 1990s to study in the West or conduct research.

During a parliament­ary campaign last spring, Orban’s government plastered anti-Soros ads across the country accusing the philanthro­pist of seeking to transform Europe from a place that is predominan­tly white and Christian to one dominated by Africans and Muslims. One campaign poster showed a photo of a smiling Soros with the words “Let’s not let Soros have the last laugh.”

Soros has also been denounced in Macedonia and Poland, as well as in Israel, where Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused him of funding opposition to a government plan to deport refugees.

 ?? PABLO GORONDI /ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In 2017, activists tear down an advertisem­ent from the Hungarian government in Budapest against George Soros. The billboards, posters and TV ads had been criticized by Hungarian Jewish leaders and others for their anti-Semitic overtones.
PABLO GORONDI /ASSOCIATED PRESS In 2017, activists tear down an advertisem­ent from the Hungarian government in Budapest against George Soros. The billboards, posters and TV ads had been criticized by Hungarian Jewish leaders and others for their anti-Semitic overtones.
 ?? OLIVIER HOSLET/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? George Soros, Founder and Chairman of the Open Society Foundation, shown at a Society meeting in 2017, was among the Democrats who received a package containing a pipe bomb last week.
OLIVIER HOSLET/ASSOCIATED PRESS George Soros, Founder and Chairman of the Open Society Foundation, shown at a Society meeting in 2017, was among the Democrats who received a package containing a pipe bomb last week.

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