When
Donald
Trump returned to office in 2025,
billionaire—soon to be
trillionaire—Elon Musk took on an
advisory role tied to the
administration’s government-reduction
efforts, often referred to as “DOGE.”
Even
though Musk was not an elected
official or a Senate-confirmed agency
head, his influence coincided with the
rapid downsizing of the federal
workforce—shrinking it by roughly
10–12 percent, with an estimated
260,000 to 300,000 employees exiting
through layoffs, buyouts, and
attrition under policies advanced by
the Trump administration.
There is
substantial evidence that billionaires have
long exercised outsized influence in
American politics—but that influence became
unusually visible during the Trump era. It
was on full display during his inauguration
and regularly shows up in the shaping of
economic and regulatory policy, in frequent
direct communication with the president, and
in influence over staffing and agency
priorities. In Musk’s case, that influence
appeared tied not only to government
downsizing efforts but also to the
regulatory posture toward technology and
industry. Even without formal titles, the
access granted to the ultra wealthy matters.
What
makes
this moment especially revealing is
that it is not an anomaly—it is a
pattern. The Gilens–Page
Study,
conducted by political scientists
Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page,
examined nearly two decades of
policy decisions and found that
economic elites and organized
business interests have substantial
independent influence on U.S.
government policy, while the
preferences of average citizens have
little to no independent effect. In
plain terms: when the wealthy want
something, it is far more likely
that they'll get it—regardless of
what the majority of Americans
think.
Seen
through that lens, the role of billionaire
influence is not surprising. It is
structural.
What this
tells us is that a system that enables
individuals to accumulate extreme wealth—and
then convert that wealth into political
influence—is not functioning as a true
democracy. It is functioning as something
else. A system that cradles self-dealing
while muting the voices of ordinary people
cannot reasonably be described as
democratic.
One of the
most persistent untruths in American
political life is that extreme wealth and
democracy can comfortably coexist. Whether
intentional or not, we have built and
sustained a system that suggests one does
not threaten the other. But scale changes
everything. Wealth at the level of
billions—and soon trillions—is not simply
money. It is power. And power, when
concentrated, does not share space
easily.
This is not
a moral argument about whether wealthy
individuals are good or bad people. It is a
structural argument about how power operates
in the absence of guardrails because that
kind of wealth is the equivalent of
operating without the normal bounds.
For most of
us, the difference between one million, one
billion and one trillion is almost
impossible to visualize. But for those of us
trying, its important to understand that the
difference is more than just adding zeros.
To make it easier to wrap your head around,
think of it this way. If measured in inches:
-
1
million inches is approximately 15.8
miles or a drive across town in Los
Angeles
-
1
billion inches is approximately 15,800
miles or a flight from L.A. to Hong Kong
and back
-
1
trillion inches is approximately 15.8
million miles or 60 trips to the Moon
Why
Billionaires and Democracy Are Structurally
Incompatible
A
participatory democracy depends on broadly
distributed power—political, economic, and
social. But when a society produces
billionaires—and soon, potentially
trillionaires—it is signaling something very
different - that it is okay with
relinquenching
When power
concentrates, democracy weakens. Let’s be
honest, who among us can finance our own
political campaign or has the cache that
would grant us access to walk into an
administration and fire thousands of federal
workers. That level of influence—the ability
to independently run a campaign, shape
policy, determine outcomes, and direct the
future—is not broadly distributed.
It is
purchased.
Participatory
Democracy
vs. Plutocracy: What’s at Stake
To shape
our society in ways that benefit all
Americans, we need to civically engage broad
swaths of Americans in more than just
voting. Participatory governance and
participatory democracy is an essential
ingredient in the recipe that molds society
into the shape that serves most of us.
It
requires:
-
meaningful
influence over public decisions
-
shared
exposure to the consequences of those
decisions
-
systems
that prevent any individual or group
from dominating the rest
-
proximity
between decision-making and lived
experience
Democracy
depends
on proximity—on people shaping
systems they must also live within.
As Jared Diamond has argued in Collapse,
societies falter when those in power
are shielded from the consequences
of their decisions. Extreme wealth
concentration produces that very
condition.
A
system in which people can
accumulate vast wealth without
having to participate in the labor
that sustains it will inevitably
produce leaders who are structurally
disconnected from the realities they
govern. This is the road to plutocracy.
Think “Let them eat cake”.
Wealth vs
Work - They Are Not the Same System
Understanding
that
wealth is not generated the same way labor
earns income is pivotal.
One of the
most important distinctions we avoid
discussing is the difference between earning
a living through labor and accumulating vast
wealth through ownership.
Labor
income is tied to:
-
time
-
effort
-
participation
-
community
It places
people inside the system.
They
experience:
They cannot
opt out of those realities.
Wealth at
scale operates differently.
It is tied
to:
Once wealth
reaches a certain level, money makes money.
And participation becomes optional.
That shift
creates distance.
When Donald
Trump's father passed away, he inherited
untold millions. He didn't have to be
a financial genius to become a billionaire
today. If Trump had simply placed his
inheritance in a standard interest-bearing
account and left it alone for ~50 years, he
would likely have somewhere between a few
billion and tens of billions of dollars
today.
Distance
From Work, Distance From Consequences
As wealth
grows, so does separation from the
conditions that define most people’s lives.
-
Workers
experience the workplace
-
Investors
experience balance sheets
-
Communities
experience policy
-
Wealth
holders experience outcomes abstractly
This is not
about personal virtue. It is about
structure.
When your
income is derived from your labor, you are
usually embedded in a community.
When your
income depends on capital, you can operate
outside of community.
Labor
ties people to community. Extreme
wealth allows people to exit
community.
That
separation weakens accountability and
reshapes decision-making.
When
Distance Becomes Governance
At extreme
levels of wealth, distance doesn’t just
exist—it is a factor in governing.
Decisions
about:
-
housing
-
healthcare
-
education
-
incarceration
are
increasingly shaped by people whose
relationship to those systems is indirect,
removed.
That
creates a dangerous imbalance:
Those
most affected by policy have the
least influence over it,
while those least affected have
the most.
That is not
democracy.
That is
hierarchy.
The
Illusion of the “Nice Billionaire”
It is
tempting to believe that a well-intentioned
billionaire can solve this problem.
They
cannot.
A “nice
billionaire” still:
-
possesses
outsized political influence
-
can
self-fund campaigns at levels others
cannot
-
can
dominate media and public attention
Their
presence normalizes the idea that extreme
wealth is compatible with democratic
leadership.
It shifts
the conversation from structure to
personality.
But
democracy does not depend on the goodwill
of the powerful.
It
depends on limiting how much power any one
person can accumulate.
What
Elections Reveal: Wealth Is
Already Political Power
When
billionaires enter political races, they
do more than compete.
They:
-
inflate
the cost of campaigns
-
crowd
out candidates without access to
wealth
-
reshape
what “viable” looks like
This
dynamic disproportionately impacts
candidates from communities that have been
historically excluded from wealth.
The
result is not just economic inequality.
It is
political inequality.
The
Racial Dimension: Inequality Multiplied
Wealth in
the United States is not distributed
randomly.
It is the
product of historical policies that
concentrated opportunity and capital along
racial lines.
That
means extreme wealth—and the political
power that comes with it—is also
concentrated.
When
billionaire candidates dominate elections,
they:
-
amplify
existing racial disparities
-
weaken
community-based political power
-
narrow
the range of voices that
shape public
policy
This is
not incidental.
It is how
structural inequality reproduces itself
inside democratic institutions.
From
Democracy to Plutocracy
A system
in which wealth determines influence is
not a democracy.
It is a
plutocracy.
In a
plutocracy:
And over
time:
Because
people recognize—whether consciously or
not—that the system is no longer
responsive to them.
The
Most Dangerous Expression: Profit From
Social Harm
Nowhere
is this contradiction clearer than in the
privatization of prisons.
Companies
like CoreCivic and GEO Group generate
profit from incarceration.
That
creates a direct financial incentive to:
-
keep
prison populations high
-
expand
detention capacity
-
influence
policies that increase incarceration
No
democratic system should allow anyone to
benefit from the growth of human
confinement.
Because
once incarceration becomes an investment:
And when
those who can shape legislation also
profit from that growth, the system is no
longer managing crime.
It
is monetizing it.
The
Throughline: Incentives Define Outcomes
This is
the connecting thread:
-
Extreme
wealth accumulates through ownership,
not labor
-
Ownership
creates distance from lived reality
-
Distance
reshapes decision-making
-
Concentrated
wealth converts into political
influence
-
Political
influence protects and expands that
concentration
That
cycle does not produce democracy.
It
produces entrenchment.
The
Bottom Line: Democracy Requires
Limits
A
participatory democracy cannot sustain
itself while allowing unlimited wealth
accumulation.
Not
because wealth is inherently wrong.
But
because scale
transforms
wealth into power.
And
power, when left unconstrained, will
always seek to preserve itself.
The
Line That Cannot Be Avoided
If we are
serious about democracy, then we must be
equally serious about this:
-
No
one should be allowed to
accumulate enough wealth to
dominate the political
system—because concentrated
wealth is concentrated
power, and that is
incompatible with democracy.
-
No
one should be able to
translate economic power
into governing
authority—because when money
governs, the will of the
people is displaced.
-
No
one should profit from
systems that depend on
social harm—because when
suffering becomes a revenue
stream, there is an
incentive to sustain and
expand it.
Because
democracy
is not just about having a voice.
It is about ensuring that no one
has a voice so amplified that it
drowns out everyone else. Looking
for more reading?
Go
here.
|