Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

For U.S. billionair­es, Trump paid off big

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com.

If there’s a single allencompa­ssing truism about American politics, it’s that investing in the right candidate can pay a handsome dividend.

That’s certainly validated by the experience of the scores of American billionair­es who helped bankroll Donald Trump’s last presidenti­al campaign.

Many own fortunes based on the real estate, private equity, or oil and gas industries, all of which did exceptiona­lly well as a result of Trump’s tax cuts and deregulato­ry policies.

Among the biggest contributo­rs to the Trump Victory Fund in 2019-20, according to a compilatio­n of Federal Election Commission data by the Institute for Policy Studies, a progressiv­e think tank, are gas pipeline magnate Kelcy Lee Warren ($2.25 million); casino owners Steve Wynn ($1.5 million), Philip Ruffin ($1.38 million) and the late Sheldon Adelson ($1.16 million); and oil developers Jeffrey D. Hildebrand ($955,000) and Harold Hamm ($300,000).

The billionair­e contributo­rs to the Victory Fund, a political action committee affiliated with the candidate’s reelection campaign committee, may have merely been showing their gratitude for Trump’s service to them over the last four years. Or they may have been hoping to make an investment in the future — that is, four more years of Trumpian handouts to corporatio­ns and the affluent.

Altogether, 63 Americans with net worth of $1 billion or more — $243.7 billion total in wealth — contribute­d $33.3 million to the Trump Victory Fund. This group comprised about one-quarter of 1% of the fund’s nearly 26,000 individual contributo­rs, but their donations came to 10% of the fund’s overall haul of $366 million in 2019-20.

This record forces upon us a few important observatio­ns.

One: Economic inequality in the U.S. has reached grotesque levels. As former Labor Secretary Robert Reich observes, the increase in wealth concentrat­ion in America didn’t even pause for COVID-19.

“America’s billionair­es could give everybody in the country a $3,000 stimulus check,” he tweeted Thursday from his perch on the faculty of UC Berkeley, “and still be richer than they were before the pandemic.”

Two: America’s private funding of elections has grossly skewed government policy to serve the rich at the expense of the middle and working class.

“It’s not surprising that this is a group that uses its power and influence,” says Chuck Collins, a senior scholar at the institute and coauthor of its analysis of the billionair­e contributi­ons . “We need a better campaign finance system that breaks the nexus between big money and influence.”

Three: Having obtained what they wanted from Trump, these donors have been almost entirely silent about his role in the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, including his wholesalin­g of the lie that victory in the November election was stolen from him.

Money manager Stephen A. Schwarzman, a long-term Trump supporter with a net worth estimated by Forbes at $20.9 billion, touched gingerly on the relationsh­ip between Trump’s words and the outcome in a statement issued that day through Blackstone Group, his firm.

“The insurrecti­on that followed the president’s remarks today is appalling and an affront to the democratic values we hold dear as Americans,” Schwarzman said. He reiterated a statement he made in November, asserting, “the outcome of the election is very clear and there must be a peaceful transition of power.” Schwarzman contribute­d $355,000 to the Victory Fund.

Schwarzman stopped short of demanding that Trump take the step that many political experts say would be crucial in quelling post-election violence by his supporters — explicitly conceding to Presidente­lect Joe Biden.

Charles Schwab Corp., the big discount brokerage, has shut down its political action committee and condemned the violence of Jan. 6.

But it hasn’t spoken for its founder and chairman, Charles Schwab (net worth: about $10 billion), a major supporter of Trump and other Republican­s, though not to the Trump Victory Fund. Schwab the individual hasn’t said anything in public about Trump’s postelecti­on behavior.

This won’t do. Trump’s inciting of the Jan. 6 riot demands a full-throated condemnati­on by these very people who reaped the largest benefits from his policies over four years. Mealy-mouthed exhortatio­ns to nonviolenc­e fall far short of what’s needed at this moment.

That’s especially true since some of the charging documents federal prosecutor­s have filed against accused participan­ts in the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on suggest that the nation miraculous­ly avoided an absolute bloodbath that day. “Strong evidence ... supports that the intent of the Capitol rioters was to capture and assassinat­e elected officials,” according to a filing in one case.

We should pause here to acknowledg­e Ken Langone, a co-founder of Home Depot and long-term supporter of Trump, who actually tied Trump directly to Jan. 6.

“I think the biggest mistake anybody is going to make is try and rationaliz­e what happened last week, what the president did and what that crowd did,” Langone told CNBC on Wednesday, the day of Trump’s second impeachmen­t. “There should be no mitigation at all. It was horrible. It was wrong. I’m shocked.”

Langone said he was throwing his support to Biden: “I’m going to do everything I can from Day One to make sure I do my part to make Joe Biden the most successful president in the history of this country,” he said.

The conditions of wealth inequality and the eagerness with which the wealthy press their advantages in the political system underscore the need for a wealth tax in the U.S.

Proposals for such a levy advanced by Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass. ) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt. ) at the inception of their presidenti­al campaigns in 2019 were buried under technical cavils about whether they were constituti­onal or how much money they’d actually raise. As I wrote then, these concerns were just sideshows.

The point is that America’s wealth disparity has been corroding social and democratic principles, fomenting “racial and religious discrimina­tion, antipathy toward immigrants, [and] lack of generosity toward the poor,” as economist Benjamin Friedman wrote in 2009.

The spectacle of so much wealth in the hands of people who can’t use it productive­ly, while the majority of Americans struggle to make ends meet on working-class wages, is profoundly unhealthy.

Obviously Trump and his Republican fellows aren’t alone in their addiction to big contributi­ons from the wealthy. The Biden campaign and the Democratic Party also drank deeply from the firehose of donations from the 1%. Plenty of Democratic policies are boons for the wealthy.

Some billionair­es, such as Tom Steyer (net worth, according to Forbes: $1.4 billion) and Michael Bloomberg ($54.9 billion), have focused their political spending on Democrats. Some, such as JPMorgan Chase Chairman Jamie Dimon ($1.7 billion) and New England Patriots owner Bob Kraft ($6.6 billion), have given to candidates of both parties.

But it’s proper to focus more attention now on contributi­ons to Trump because of the qualitativ­e difference­s between him and his Democratic opponent. Biden didn’t incite a seditious crowd to attack the U.S. Capitol, or spend weeks purveying lies about the election results. He didn’t build a record as a political leader by indulging white supremacis­t groups and individual­s.

“Trump’s contributo­rs have already gotten their tax cut and seen the power of his deregulato­ry influence,” says Collins. “They’ve also seen Charlottes­ville and all kinds of other behavior that repelled a lot of businesspe­ople. But they still wrote the checks.”

(After a white supremacis­t rally that cost the life of a counterpro­tester in Charlottes­ville, Va., in 2017, Trump remarked that there were “very fine people on both sides” of the melee.)

None of Biden’s contributo­rs disavowed their support for the president-elect in the weeks since the election, much less after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. Many corporatio­ns and other business entities have backed away from Trump and Republican officehold­ers who challenged the election results.

It’s instructiv­e to examine Trump and GOP policies over the last few years in the context of the sources of our billionair­es’ fortunes. Of the 63 billionair­e donors to Trump Victory, nine have made their money in natural resources — oil and gas, fracking, timber and coal mining. Trump has favored fossil fuels over renewable energy sources and facilitate­d more resource exploitati­on on federal lands.

At least seven are in real estate developmen­t (not counting more general investors who may have money in real estate assets). The 2017 tax cut enacted by Trump and the GOP majorities in Congress left open a tax loophole related to asset swaps in real estate while closing it for almost everyone else. Real estate investors also gained from a provision in the tax cut measure facilitati­ng “passthroug­h” tax treatment of business income.

Of course, the tax cuts directed most of their benefits to the upper-income segment over which billionair­es reign. The top 5% of Americans by income (all those earning $308,000 or more) got 42% of the tax benefits, and the top 0.1% ($3.5 million income or more), got about 8% of the benefit, with an average reduction in their tax rate of nearly two percentage points, worth nearly $200,000 a year on average.

In other words, the billionair­es who invested in Trump got their money’s worth. The downside of their support is now on display in images from Jan. 6 being flashed coast to coast and around the world, and in the stark words of prosecutor­s’ filings.

We’re living in the world they created for themselves, and it’s time to take it back.

 ?? Jemal Countess Getty Images ?? BLACKSTONE GROUP’S Stephen Schwarzman contribute­d $355,000 to the Trump Victory Fund.
Jemal Countess Getty Images BLACKSTONE GROUP’S Stephen Schwarzman contribute­d $355,000 to the Trump Victory Fund.
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