The media says they’re fleeing a wealth tax. Except, they’re not.Click to view this email in your browser. [link removed]
[link removed]
JANUARY 22, 2026
I've been writing for the
**Prospect** for over 25 years. Our print magazine is where the work I'm proudest of lives. We've got a sports issue coming that's going to surprise people. The same lens we bring to labor and corporate power, turned on an industry that often avoids scrutiny. I think you'll want to read it on paper.
**–Harold Meyerson**
Subscribe → [link removed]
****MEYERSON ON TAP****
**The non-exodus of California billionaires**
**The media says they’re fleeing a wealth tax. Except, they’re not.**
Nary a day has passed of late that hasn’t seen stories about the billionaires’ flight from California, lest they be subjected to a proposed wealth tax that hasn’t yet gathered the required signatures to qualify for the ballot. The fact that there is no billionaires’ flight from California hasn’t impeded the flow of such tales.
“**Why Are Billionaires Bolting California?** [link removed]” asked a headline in today’s
**New York Times** print edition. “**How Tech Billionaires Spurred an Exodus of Rich People From California** [link removed],” read a
**Washington Post** headline from earlier this week. “**Billionaires flee** [link removed],” began a
**Wall Street Journal** video posted last Sunday.
Except, they aren’t. The three most prominent billionaires reported to have moved—Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, and the libertarian critic of democracy as a form of government Peter Thiel—all said they’ve moved some of their offices to other states or opened new offices there, but they did
**not** say that they themselves had moved. The proposed wealth tax only applies to billionaires who are
**residents** of California, and none of the three have actually said that they themselves want to abandon their Golden State residency.
David Sacks, Donald Trump’s AI and crypto czar despite his ongoing investments in such concerns, did indeed say that like Elon Musk, his fellow white South African native, he’d moved to Texas, though in both cases we’re compelled to assume that this was only because Boer-controlled South Africa was no longer a going concern.
One Bay Area billionaires’ tax attorney has also reported that some of his clients are looking into moving. But since the tax, if enacted by voters this November, applies to billionaires who lived in California on January 1 of this year, moving at this point or later wouldn’t affect their wealth tax liability. Moreover, it’s a one-time-only tax on 5 percent of the state’s billionaires’ wealth as of 2025; if enacted, it wouldn’t apply to new billionaires, or billionaires moving in from other states, much less any billionaires who choose to relocate now.
prospect.org/donate
Besides, as **the**
**Prospect** [link removed] and a host of others have documented, raising taxes on the very rich has a negligible effect on billionaire residency. When New York raised its taxes on residents with annual incomes exceeding $2.16 million in 2021, a study from the Fiscal Policy Institute found that the top 1 percent of income owners moved out of state at a rate of 0.2 percent. If we apply that rate of out-migration to California’s estimated 200 billionaires, we’d find that the number actually leaving would be a little less than half of one person. In other words, David Sacks has already got it covered. For that matter, an income tax hike on the richest Californians that state voters enacted in 2012 yielded no millionaire exodus, either.
What all of these stories fail to consider is the number of Californians who’d be able to retain their ACA and Medicaid coverage if the proposal is enacted by California voters, as the funds from the tax would make up for cuts to those programs enacted by Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill.
**Their** residency plans if this tax isn’t approved have not been the subject of any stories, just as the coverage of the income tax hikes that Zohran Mamdani proposed on New York’s millionaires in order to fund universal child care failed to reckon with the number of young families compelled either to leave the city or reduce other spending in the local economy due to the cost of child care.
Even if we grant that the David Sacks trickle might grow to a full drop of California’s billionaires, that only makes the case for a national wealth tax all the stronger. It certainly is theoretically possible that state wealth taxes, particularly if their windows of liability cover future periods of wealth (as the proposed California version does not), could prompt more billionaire state bouncing. But a nationwide tax would suffer no such consequences, and, indeed, would set in motion a profoundly win-win dynamic. If billionaires chose to remain Americans, a modest share of their wealth would go to provide demonstrably needed human services, infrastructure investment, and the like. If they chose to move abroad, they could no longer legally contribute to U.S. political campaigns, thereby weakening the oligarchy’s sway over U.S. politics and policy.
If that’s not a win-win, I don’t know what is. Would that Democrats like Gavin Newsom, who are **committed** [link removed] to stopping the billionaire tax, take this into account.
Harold Meyerson
Editor-at-Large
Harold Meyerson
Editor-at-Large
prospect.org/donate
On the
**Prospect** website [link removed]
[link removed]
Meet the Members of Congress Trying to Cut Your Power Bill [link removed]
As runaway utility bills squeeze ratepayers across the country, elected officials are escalating efforts to rein in investor-owned utilities—and not just with legislation. [link removed]
BY JAMES BARATTA [link removed]
[link removed]
Minnesota on Strike [link removed]
No work, no school, no shopping [link removed]
BY WHITNEY CURRY WIMBISH [link removed]
[link removed]
The Rio Grande Was Once an Inviting River. It’s Now a Militarized Border. [link removed]
Since Trump returned to office, dozens of environmental, wildlife and public access rules have been waived to make way for the border wall. [link removed]
BY ELENA BRUESS [link removed]
To receive this newsletter directly in your inbox, click here to subscribe. [link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Copyright (c) 2026 The American Prospect. All rights reserved.
To manage your newsletter preferences, use our preference management page [link removed].
To unsubscribe from all American Prospect emails, including newsletters, follow this link to unsubscribe [link removed].
Sent to:
[email protected]
Unsubscribe [link removed]
The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States