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Been diving into this fascinating breakdown of how America's richest tech titans actually position themselves politically. What struck me most is how differently they approach it.
Elon Musk's obviously all-in with Trump - we're talking $75 million to America PAC and constant campaign appearances. The guy's betting big, and if Trump wins, SpaceX and Tesla could see some serious tailwinds. Meanwhile, Jeff Bezos is playing it cool. He praised Trump's response to that assassination attempt but Amazon's actually funding Harris. Classic billionaire hedging.
Then you've got the Oracle guy Larry Ellison sitting somewhere in the middle - close to Trump apparently but not making it official. And Zuckerberg? The Trump-Meta relationship has done a complete 180 from the Facebook ban days. Interesting how quickly things can shift.
But here's what really caught my attention: the neutrality crowd. Warren Buffett straight up said he won't endorse anyone. Larry Page politics stance is basically nonexistent - former Google CEO just staying out of it entirely. Same with Sergey Brin, though his donation history leans Democratic. Steve Ballmer launched this nonpartisan data website instead of picking sides. Jensen Huang and Michael Dell? They're basically saying 'we follow policy, not personalities.'
Out of the 800 American billionaires, at least 144 are actually spending money on this race. But what's wild is how many of the ultra-wealthy are either silent or actively neutral. You'd think with that much money involved, everyone would have a dog in the fight. Guess some of them are smart enough to know that either way, they'll be fine.
The total raised this cycle is over $3.8 billion, and billionaires alone have dropped at least $695 million. That's roughly 18% of everything. Kind of puts into perspective who really shapes these things.