Consider This from NPR - Is there an American oligarchy?
Episode Date: January 22, 2025When Donald Trump was sworn in on Monday, he was flanked by billionaires Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg.Also on the dais was Apple CEO Tim Cook, Open AI's CEO Sam Altman, and Bernard Arnaul...t owner of L-V-M-H which owns luxury brands like Dior and Louis Vuitton. An American government closely aligned with money and power is something outgoing President Joe Biden warned about in his farewell address. Oligarchy – A word that once more commonly referred to the super wealthy of Eastern Europe has reached the shores of the U.S. What could an American oligarchy mean for the U.S. government and its citizens For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.orgEmail us at considerthis@npr.orgLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Tech giant Elon Musk has been compared to an alien, has called himself a 3,000-year-old
vampire and was once the inspiration for the screen depiction of Marvel superhero Tony
Stark.
But there is another descriptor following Musk around lately.
They're clearly oligarchs.
They have concentration of wealth and power.
That was former Trump advisor Steve Bannon on his podcast, War Room.
He later spoke to my colleague Steve Inskeep on Morning Edition.
These oligarchs in the Silicon Valley, they have a very different view of how people should
govern themselves.
I call it techno-feudalism.
Bannon has been feuding with Musk over immigrant access to work visas in the U.S., but he's
not the only one to warn about the influence of billionaires like Musk.
This whole idea may be the only point of agreement between Bannon and former President Joe Biden.
Today, an oligarchy is taking shape in America of extreme wealth, power, and influence that
literally threatens our entire democracy, our basic rights and freedoms.
Even before Musk was chosen to run Trump's newly created Department of Government Efficiency,
he had deep investments in the federal government.
Where both the federal government and the rest of the private sector have under-invested,
Elon Musk has stepped in and really dominated.
That is NPR's tech correspondent, Bobby Allen.
60% of the country's electric vehicle chargers are controlled by Tesla. correspondent Bobby Allen. With the work Musk is doing, sometimes there's no other alternative. So the federal government just can't disentangle itself from the Musk empire.
But Musk is not the only billionaire looking to work with the new administration.
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and others have signaled their eagerness to
cooperate with the new president.
Consider this.
Oligarchy, a word that once more commonly referred to the super wealthy
of Eastern Europe, has reached the shores of the U.S. What could an American oligarchy mean
for the U.S. government and its citizens? From NPR, I'm Elsa Chang.
It's Consider This from NPR.
When Donald Trump was sworn in on Monday, he was flanked by billionaires Elon Musk, Jeff
Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg.
Also on the dais were Apple CEO Tim Cook, OpenAI
CEO Sam Altman, and Bernard Arnault, owner of LVMH, which owns luxury brands like Dior
and Louis Vuitton. An American government, closely aligned with money and power, is something
that outgoing President Joe Biden warned about in his farewell address, referring to an oligarchy
taking shape in America. Now, oligarchy is a word more commonly associated with rich
businessmen in Eastern Europe, but it is being used increasingly here in the U.S.
We wanted to understand why, so we called someone who's written a lot about this.
Jeffrey Winters is a professor of political science at Northwestern University and joins us now, welcome.
Nice to be here, thank you.
Nice to have you.
So I suppose we should just first define
what an oligarchy is exactly.
What is your understanding of the term
and where does this term come from?
Yeah, you know, its current interpretation
in the United States is quite negative. I
teach a course at Northwestern, and on the very first day of this Oligarchs and Elites
course some years ago, one of the students said, Russia has oligarchs and the United
States has rich people. And there was this sort of interpretation, right? But it turns out the word
has a lineage that goes back more than 2500 years. And it goes back to Plato and Aristotle.
And the meaning is simply persons who are super powerful because they are super wealthy.
are super powerful because they are super wealthy. And it is the use of wealth power
as political influence that has always defined oligarchs
throughout history.
In other words, an oligarch is an extremely wealthy person.
And there is the suggestion that that person uses their wealth
for personal gain?
Well, okay, it might be personal,
but it is the deploying of it in politics.
So let me give you an example.
There might be an oligarch who feels very strongly
about abortion policy,
but they're using that money power in the political system
to sway the political outcome.
That's one.
But overwhelmingly, what you refer to is correct, which is the number one political objective
of oligarchs throughout history has been wealth defense, defending their fortunes from redistribution. Well, I want to get back to Biden's farewell address in which he talked about this rising
oligarchy in America.
And he likened today's super wealthy to the robber barons of the 19th and early 20th centuries,
to people like John D. Rockefeller, Cornelius Vanderbilt, JP Morgan.
Is that fair comparison? Would you say that today's mega wealthy hold
the same kind of influence that those men did way back then?
Yeah. And the thing that really stands out is that there was a visibility, an awareness of this kind
of power being exerted politically at that time, and it kind of parallels
the consciousness or awareness that people have now. And so, yes, in between that long
period there have been oligarchs and there's been oligarchic power, but it hasn't been
as visible and as agitating to people as it is now.
And partly that has to do with the fact that the Supreme Court had a decision in 2010,
Citizens United, that said using your wealth as voice, as First Amendment expression is
completely legitimate and, for all intents and purposes,
unlimited.
And so the floodgate was opened for the use of this very unequal power.
But let me ask you this.
I mean, these so-called modern-day oligarchs, they are, for the most part, quite successful
people.
You know, they're leaders in business.
Their companies are a huge part of the American economy.
Are there benefits, legitimate benefits, to have them sharing their expertise and insights
with government leaders or future leaders?
Sure, absolutely.
I mean, we're talking about people who are very, very talented.
There's no doubt about it.
They wouldn't be where they were unless they inherited their it. They wouldn't be where they were unless they
inherited their money. They wouldn't be where they were. But I don't think the United States
should avoid drawing on very talented people. Of course it should draw on talented people.
But one of the ways that's been done, Elsa, is that in the past, if you were brought in, for example, from industry or
from the finance sector, you had to sort of leave that position and come and serve and
not still maintain your businesses.
You had to be sort of shielded from doing things that were beneficial to your business.
So those kinds of protections in the past have
been very important.
Well, you've kind of been nipping at the edges of the answer to the next question,
but let me just ask you straight out. What do you see as the biggest risk of a president
being closely aligned with the billionaire class? Well, I would just simply say it's not the first time.
One of my messages is this is not new.
Only its visibility is new.
Really that is the fundamental message.
The United States is a vastly more unequal society today than it was 50 years ago.
And that's partly because the power of oligarchs has been so great for the last half century
that the Rand Corporation, for example, estimates that over those 50 years, $50 trillion in
wealth has been shifted upward to a very small number of people while people at the average level
of society have not benefited.
But would you say that there is something unprecedented about this current administration
in the sense of the kind of political influence you see from the mega, mega rich?
Or is this just history replaying itself?
I think it is history replaying itself. I wouldn't go so far as to say absolutely
unprecedented. But I would say definitely one of the reasons we in the country are talking about
it is it is incredibly visible and people are concerned about the impact.
I mean, we saw the seating chart at inauguration.
It is very visible.
The billionaires were right there.
Yeah, literally, literally right there.
There is a risk to having that much visibility, which is we saw in the
Gilded Age and the Robber Baron era that there was a backlash.
So one of the strategies of oligarchs throughout history
has been not to be too visible.
And that has worked well for them.
And visibility has not always worked well.
Well, I was just going to ask you,
how do you see Trump's alliance with Musk
and other powerful CEOs playing out?
Do you see a backlash down the road
from people who have just had enough with this? I'm going to deflect the question by saying political scientists have a hard enough time
explaining what has happened. Really? You can't just get your crystal ball out?
No, we're challenged just explaining what has happened.
Fair enough.
Yeah. challenge just explaining what has happened. So, yeah. Fair enough. Jeffrey Winters is a professor of political science at Northwestern University.
He's also author of the upcoming book called Domination Through Democracy.
Why Oligarchs Win.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
Thank you.
It's a pleasure.
This episode was produced by Mark Rivers with audio engineering by Hannah Glovna.
It was edited by Courtney Dornig. Our executive producer is Sammy Yannigan.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Elsa Chang.