Tomorrow, Jeff Bezos — the wealthiest person in the world — will launch into space.
Meanwhile, in America today, over half of the country lives paycheck to paycheck. Nearly 43 million people are saddled with student loan debt, preventing many from buying a home or starting a family. And for those who do start a family, the astronomical costs of child care are squeezing budgets even harder, forcing millions of young parents — especially women — out of the workforce.
Our economy has worked better and better for the rich and powerful, and worse and worse for everyone else. How did we get here? We got here in part because billionaires like Jeff Bezos and giant corporations like Amazon have spent years avoiding paying their fair share in taxes. They’ve lobbied for loopholes, cooked up schemes with the best accountants money can buy, and hollowed out our government’s ability to invest in our people, from roads and bridges to child care and higher education.
Our tax system is rigged for those at the top. That’s why I’m fighting every day in the Senate to pass a wealth tax and level the playing field for working families. We've got to keep pushing, and that's only possible with the support of grassroots supporters like you.
Add your name if you’re with me: It's time for a wealth tax to make ultra-millionaires and billionaires like Jeff Bezos pay their fair share.
Look, I get it. Jeff Bezos can do what he wants with his money. But to use his enormous wealth to go to space after years of systematically paying less than his fair share of taxes is a punch in the gut to the tens of millions of Americans who struggle to make ends meet.
Just look at the numbers: Between 2014-2018, Jeff Bezos’ wealth grew by $99 billion. He paid only 0.98% of that in taxes. The rest of America? Last year, the 99% paid an average of 7.2% of their total wealth in taxes.
The worst part? Under our broken tax system, it’s completely legal. That’s because billionaires like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Mike Bloomberg don’t make their fortunes through income like working families do. Their wealth comes from assets — like stock portfolios, art collections, and super-yachts. In fact, Jeff Bezos reportedly paid $0 in federal income taxes in 2007 and 2011 — despite already being a multi-billionaire.
My wealth tax bill would place a two-cent per dollar tax on people with a net worth above $50 million — a few cents more for the billionaires. That means Jeff Bezos would pay $5.4 billion of his estimated net worth of $181 billion — and he’d still have more than enough money for his space missions and super-yachts.
This small tax on America’s richest 100,000 families would generate huge amounts of revenue totaling at least $3 trillion, providing money for President Biden's big agenda to build back better and more. Policies like expanding the caregiving economy — everything from child care to nursing homes — rebuilding infrastructure, high quality k-12 education, and tuition-free public college and technical schools.
A wealth tax is critical for raising revenue, and that revenue is critical for raising opportunity. We build a future for all of our kids by investing in opportunity. This is one way we can make this government work for everyone — not just the rich and powerful.
Add your name to support our plan for a wealth tax, and help build the grassroots support that we'll need from across the country to pass it in Washington.
Thanks for being a part of this,
Elizabeth
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