Letters from an American - Money is Flooding into the Political System
Episode Date: March 13, 2026March 12, 2026American politics have been corrupted by billionaires, Senator Tim Sheehy’s campaign in Montana benefitted from donations from more than 63 billionaires, Elon Musk is donating millio...ns to Republicans, Trump promised billionaires that he would favor their interests if they donated $1 billion to his re-election campaign, Trump gave his wealthy supporters the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that extended the 2017 tax cuts, cut regulation, and slashed the social safety net, The US has borrowed $1 trillion over the last five months, as Trump tax cuts slash revenue, In the 1860s, Republicans invented the income tax, Americans welcomed the taxes.Watch today's recording here: https://www.youtube.com/live/g9TUa1Rwd6U?si=T8_KKcHQZElhpnZ-Get full, free access to Letters from an American here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribeYou can also find me:Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hcrichardson.bsky.socialInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heathercoxrichardson/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/heathercoxrichardson/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@heathercoxrichardson Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe
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March 12th, 26. In Ohio today, Republican candidate for governor Vivek Ramoswamy
launched a $10 million TV and digital ad campaign to run until election day.
Jeremy Palser of Cleveland.com explained that this ad buy alone is more than twice as much
as the $4.4 million Democratic candidate Amy Acton, the former state health director, has raised.
and it is only about half of the $19.5 million
Ramoswami's campaign has raised.
Forbes reported in December 2025
that Ramoswami's net worth had nearly doubled
from about $1 billion to about $1.8 billion
since he announced his candidacy in February 2025.
On March 9th, Mike Baker and Stephen Rich of the New York Times
published a long expose of the corruption of a
American politics by billionaires. They explain how underwriting political campaigns from those for
local school boards to the presidency has enabled the very wealthy to lock in their policy preferences
for tax cuts, deregulation, and cuts to the social safety net, while also steering valuable government
contracts to themselves. In 2024, Baker and Rich note, 300 billionaires and their immediate family members
donated 19% of all political contributions in federal elections, either directly or through political
action committees or PACs. While that amount does not account for money that might have gone through
dark money groups that don't have to disclose their donors, it still amounts to more than
$3 billion, or an average of $10 million per family. The author's example of what this flood of money
looks like in the political system is the victory of Senator Tim Sheehe, a Republican of Montana,
who beat popular Democratic incumbent John Tester in 2024, with the help of $8 million from billionaire
Stephen Schwartzman and at least 63 other billionaires and 37 of their immediate family members,
who donated about $47 million to Sheehe's Senate race. In the Senate, Sheehee has become a key ally on
tax policies that benefit the wealthy and co-sponsored a proposal to eliminate the estate tax,
the author's note. Shehi has been in the news lately for killing a decades-old solar energy tax credit
when his own home uses solar power. Sheehe's spokesperson declined to tell reporters if he had used
the tax credit for 26% of the system's cost. Sheehi has also been in the news for jumping into the
effort of three Capitol police officers to eject a protester opposed to the Iran war from a Senate
Armed Services Committee hearing. The arm of Brian McGinnis, a Marine Corps veteran who was wearing
his dress uniform, was stuck behind the door. As Shihei threw his weight into McGinnis,
there was the audible crack of his arm breaking. When a spectator called Shihia coward,
the senator appeared to tell him, go for yourself. Shehi later said,
said he was trying to de-escalate the situation and blamed McGinnis for causing violence.
Billionaire Elon Musk spent close to $300 million in the 2024 elections, putting much of it,
as well as the support of the social media platform X behind Trump. After his leadership of the
Department of Government Efficiency created a backlash to his companies and sparked a rift between him and
Trump, Musk said he was going to step back from political spending. And yet, by the end of 2025,
he had already given $20 million to Republicans to prepare for the 26 elections. It's a big deal
for Trump and for the Republicans to have the world's richest man on their side, Republican strategist
Brian Seych told Julia Mueller and Julia Shapiro of the Hill in February. Baker and Rich noted that
while both parties had reaped windfalls from billionaires in the past, in 2024, that money turned
sharply toward Republicans. For every dollar of billionaire money that went to Democrats, they wrote,
$5 went to Republicans. During his term, President Joe Biden called for securing the solvency of
Social Security and Medicare and addressing the growing national debt with higher taxes on the
wealthy in corporations. He wanted to increase the tax rate for those making more than $400,000 a
year, to close the carried interest loophole, and to impose a tax of 25% on Americans with a wealth
of more than $100 million, saying during his 24 state of the union address, no billionaire should pay
a lower tax rate than a teacher, a sanitation worker, a nurse. When she took over as the
candidate, Vice President Kamala Harris also called for higher taxes on the wealthy,
although it's slightly lower rates than Biden backed.
In contrast, Trump promised billionaires he would extend the 2017 tax cuts that benefited the wealthy in corporations.
At a fundraiser at Mar-a-Lago, he told oil executives that they should raise a billion dollars to put him back in office.
That price tag would be a deal, he told them, because of a price tag,
them because of the taxes and regulations they would avoid if he were in charge.
And so some of them pumped money into his campaign. Once back in office, Trump gave his wealthy
supporters what he promised, the one big beautiful bill act that extended the 2017 tax cuts,
cut regulation, and slashed the social safety net. But along with those tax cuts and deregulation,
those who supported Trump gave the country an erratic
president who has destabilized the world economy through tariffs and now has led us into war in the
Middle East. Today, Paul Krugman wrote in his newsletter that this is the billionaire's war,
since it was their campaign money that mobilized low-information voters to rally behind Trump
and his minions. There are major societal implications for that war. It is already costing
at least $1 billion a day, and administration officials have suggested,
they are going to ask Congress for more money for it.
That request will come on top of the news of March 10th
that, according to the Congressional Budget Office,
the U.S. has borrowed $1 trillion over the past five months.
That's $50 billion a week on average
as Trump's tax cuts slash revenue.
Republicans are sounding the alarm about the ballooning debt
and suggesting the only way to address it
is to cut more programs that benefit the American people.
But that raises fundamental questions
about the purpose of the US government.
What should it do?
Whom should it benefit?
And why?
In the 1860s, during the US Civil War,
the Republican Party reacted to rising expenses
and growing debt, not by punishing everyday Americans,
but by inventing the income tax.
In a time when the very existence of the American
American government was under threat, Republicans argued that the federal government had a right
to demand 99% of a man's property for an urgent necessity. When the nation required it, Vermont's
Justin Smith Morrill said, the property of the people belongs to the government. From the
beginning, Congressman graduated the taxes according to income. Morrill said, the weight of
taxation must be distributed equally, not upon each man an equal amount, but a tax proportionate
to his ability to pay. Recognizing that those who supported the government financially would
care deeply about its survival, the American people welcomed the taxes. Even conservative
Republican newspapers declared, there is not the slightest objection raised in any loyal quarter.
to as much taxation as may be necessary.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts,
recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
