This article takes a look at how Silicon Valley’s wealthiest tech leaders are pouring money into California politics. The focus is on the governor’s race and the ongoing fight over a proposed billionaire wealth tax.
New campaign finance filings spill the details on whether these mega-donors back Governor Gavin Newsom or throw their weight behind anti-tax campaigns. Big names like Eric Schmidt and Sergey Brin are steering millions.
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In Marin County, folks in towns like San Rafael, Mill Valley, Novato, Sausalito, and Tiburon are watching the money flow closely. They’re weighing how all this national cash could shape local debates on housing, transit, and open space.
Tech wealth reshapes California campaigns
Campaign finance records show Silicon Valley’s elite hedging their bets. They’re funding both gubernatorial contenders and anti-tax measures.
This surge of donations highlights how Marin County voters are tied to statewide battles over tax policy, housing, and economic growth. As signature-gathering speeds up for the proposed billionaire wealth tax, donors are juggling support for tech-friendly candidates with efforts to stop tax initiatives that some say threaten California’s innovation economy.
Familiar Hochmeister names from the San Francisco–area tech scene are in the mix. Their influence stretches across the Bay Area, including Marin cities like Mill Valley and Novato.
Residents there often wonder how state policy shifts could affect things like affordable housing, traffic, and school funding.
Key donors and where the money is flowing
- Eric Schmidt: about $1.04 million to the California Business Roundtable opposing the Billionaire Tax Act; $2 million to Building a Better California (anti-tax).
- Sergey Brin: contributions to both parties; $39,200 to Republican Steve Hilton, $78,400 to Democrat Matt Mahan; $1 million to Deliver for California (supporting Mahan); and $20 million to Building a Better California.
- Tony Xu (DoorDash): $39,200 to Mahan; $2 million to Building a Better California.
- Reid Hoffman (LinkedIn): $39,200 to Mahan; also part of Silicon Valley donor networks backing anti-tax efforts.
- Peter Thiel: $3 million to California Business Roundtable (anti-tax).
- James Siminoff: $100,000 to California Business Roundtable.
- Chris Larsen (crypto entrepreneur): $750,000 to the California Business Roundtable; $2 million to Building a Better California.
- Patrick Collison (Stripe): $2 million to Building a Better California.
- Steve Huffman, Kyle Vogt, Sean Parker, Mark Pincus: backed Matt Mahan by maxing out individual contribution limits, showing the tech world’s broad support for a candidate seen as tech-friendly.
These dollars are flooding campaigns in Marin County and beyond. Candidates are grappling with political messaging and a bigger debate about balancing economic vitality with public services.
In places like San Rafael and Tiburon, people wonder how funding priorities—housing, transit, or open-space preservation—will shift depending on who controls the governor’s office.
Candidates linked with Silicon Valley donors
Both Matt Mahan and Steve Hilton have publicly opposed the billionaire tax. That lines up with the anti-tax push from several major donors.
As the signature-gathering race heats up, donors who have supported both sides show just how nimble the political calculus has gotten among Marin City voters. These voters often want stable school funding, reliable transit, and open-space protections.
The donor crossovers—funding anti-tax drives while backing pro-tech, pro-growth candidates—hint at a broader strategy of hedging bets across the political field.
What this means for Marin voters
- Expect more attention on how tax policy could affect housing and development in Novato, San Rafael, and Larkspur.
- Local offices and ballot measures in Ross and Corte Madera might get viewed through the lens of these statewide money flows, even when the issues are local.
- Voters in Fairfax and Sausalito will hear plenty about whether tax policy should fund transit, climate resilience, and affordable housing that shapes daily life in tide pools and hillsides alike.
What happens next and why it matters in Marin
The billionaire tax campaign is in its signature-gathering phase right now. Organizers say they’re racing to collect enough signatures for the November ballot.
Representatives for Schmidt declined to comment. Brin didn’t respond to requests, which kind of shows how even in tight-knit Marin, national money can move with a hands-off approach to local press.
For Marin residents following housing, traffic, and open-space debates, the outcome here could shape funding along the coastal corridor from Sausalito to Mill Valley for years to come.
Tracking the filings and what to watch
- Keep an eye on the anti-tax committee activity—Building a Better California. The business roundtables might shift their lobbying focus at any moment.
- It’s worth watching for donors who split their bets between candidates and ballot measures. That kind of political insurance could shake up Marin County talks on density and zoning in San Anselmo and Fairfax.
- Local campaigns could start picking up on these statewide money moves. As they chase endorsements and volunteers in Marin City and nearby, you might spot some echoes.
Here is the source article for this story: Google founder backs both Republican and Democrat in California governor’s race while ex-CEO fights billionaire tax
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