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America's 10 Richest Billionaires and Their Political Stances
Money talks in politics. And the 2025 election cycle? It's burning through cash like never before. Billionaires are pouring hundreds of millions into campaign coffers. Big money. Really big.
Some ultra-rich Americans pick sides openly. Others stay quiet. Let's peek at where the top 10 stand:
Elon Musk ($263.3 billion)
The world's richest man has jumped headfirst into the political arena. Showing up at rallies. Writing big checks to PACs. The Tesla and SpaceX boss seems pretty cozy with certain candidates. Kind of makes you wonder if his companies might get some nice government contracts if things go his way.
Jeff Bezos ($215 billion)
Amazon's founder tweets nice things about some politicians. But no official endorsements yet. Interesting. Amazon's money tends to flow to both sides of the aisle.
Larry Ellison ($207.1 billion)
The Oracle guy? Republican-friendly. Always has been. No formal backing this time around, though financial magazines keep pointing out his connections to certain political figures. Old habits.
Mark Zuckerberg ($196.2 billion)
Meta's chief has a weird relationship with Washington. Content moderation headaches. Hearings. Drama. Says he's neutral this time. Politicians disagree. Who knows what's actually happening behind closed doors?
Warren Buffett ($142.2 billion)
The Oracle of Omaha? Not playing. Period. His company made it crystal clear: "Mr. Buffett will not endorse any investment portfolio or political candidate, now or in the future." That's that.
Larry Page ($142.1 billion)
Google's co-founder keeps his politics close to the vest. Not much public talk. Has given to Democrats before. Stays in the shadows while other tech bosses make noise. Business first, it seems.
Sergey Brin ($136 billion)
The other Google guy hasn't picked sides openly. His wallet has historically leaned Democratic. Supported Obama back in the day. Laying low this round.
Steve Ballmer ($121.9 billion)
Ex-Microsoft CEO is all about the facts. His USAFacts project is strictly nonpartisan. When pressed about voting plans? "I will vote, because I am an American citizen. But I will vote privately." Fair enough.
Jensen Huang ($118.2 billion)
Nvidia's leader takes a practical stance. On taxes? "Whatever the tax rate is, we're going to support it." No candidate endorsements. Just rolling with the punches.
Michael Dell ($107.9 billion)
Dell's founder isn't jumping into candidate battles. He's more concerned with tech policy and economic stuff. The personal computing pioneer keeps his ballot choices personal.