< https://hartmannreport.com/p/how-rightwing-billionaires-created-d8a >

How Rightwing Billionaires Created a Faux Movement and Used It to Rob America 
Blind
While Americans were trained to fear immigrants, trans kids, and each other, 
the billionaire class quietly extracted trillions from the middle class and 
captured the nation’s politics, media & courts…

Thom Hartmann

May 08, 2026

For decades, many Democrats have suspected what’s now being confirmed in plain 
English by a Trump insider. Ashley St. Clair — the 27-year-old former Turning 
Point USA brand ambassador and mother of one of Elon’s 14 kids who built a 
million-follower platform on X and became one of MAGA’s most visible young 
women — has spent the past few weeks blowing the lid off the entire racket.

In a series of TikTok monologues and a recent feature in The Washington Post, 
she’s describing in detail how the Republican’s right-wing influencer economy 
actually works, and her bottom line is brutal: she estimates that “roughly 99 
percent” of the largest right-wing influencers are compensated in some form, 
most of it locked behind nondisclosure agreements so airtight that anyone who 
tries to talk about it will get buried under litigation they can’t afford.

According to St. Clair, GOP consulting firms (some run by former White House 
officials) run platforms where wealthy donors and Republican political 
operatives can list influence campaigns, and influencers will sign up to push 
specific scripts, petitions, or even GOP legislative messaging on a per-click 
rate or for a flat fee.

There’s no disclosure requirement because the content is “political” rather 
than “commercial” and the Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that political 
lies (“speech”) are protected in ways that wouldn’t be the case for lies told 
to simply make money.

She’s shared screenshots of DMs offering thousands per post, and she’s detailed 
coordinated group chats on X where administration officials and Trump’s team 
can push talking points to the biggest accounts in real time.

Smaller influencers and the mainstream media see the resulting wave of 
identical posts across social media, assume it’s an organic movement, and jump 
on the bandwagon, creating an even larger echo chamber for rightwing talking 
points that benefit billionaires or monopolistic corporations.

> It isn’t. As she put it: “There is no free thinking here. They are waiting to 
> get marching orders and a direct deposit.”

If any of this sounds familiar, it’s because we already saw a version of it in 
2024, when the Biden Justice Department unsealed an indictment revealing that 
Putin’s people had funneled almost $10 million through a Tennessee shell 
company, Tenet Media, to bankroll a group of right-wing influencers including 
Tim Pool, Benny Johnson, and Dave Rubin who podcast to millions daily.

One rightwing influencer was reportedly paid $400,000 a month plus a $100,000 
signing bonus to produce videos that just happened to riff on topics serving 
Trump’s and the Kremlin’s interests. (The influencers all swore they were 
victims who didn’t know the money was Russian, if you can believe that, but 
they sure were happy to take and keep it.)

And the broader point stands: the entire ecosystem of right-wing media is so 
saturated with covert money that a foreign adversary could plug straight into 
it without anyone even noticing, and did!

I’ve been around long enough to remember when this stuff was happening to radio 
hosts, before podcasting took off. Back in the early 2000s, I had a friend who 
was a nationally syndicated rightwing talk show host, and he told me how every 
time he gave a speech to a high school audience, a right-wing foundation would 
cut him a $20,000 check as a “speaker’s fee” to supplement his income. He did a 
dozen or more a year. That was the level of subsidy on offer just for keeping 
kids’ minds tilted in the right direction, and it was, he said, available to 
hundreds of rightwing radio hosts across the country.

None of this came out of nowhere.

It started with the Powell Memo of August 1971, when corporate lawyer and 
tobacco company board member Lewis Powell (about to be appointed to the Supreme 
Court by Richard Nixon) sent a confidential blueprint to the U.S. Chamber of 
Commerce telling American business it had to build a permanent infrastructure 
of think tanks, media operations, scholars-on-call, colleges, and legal 
foundations to destroy New Deal programs like Social Security and union rights.

Joseph Coors took that memo and used it to seed the Heritage Foundation in 1973 
with $250,000. Richard Mellon Scaife followed with tens of millions. The 
Bradley, Koch, Uihlein, and Seid family fortunes joined the party.

Today that same network of six billionaire family fortunes has been joined by 
other rightwing billionaires to put more than $120 million into the groups 
behind Project 2025 alone, and dark-money conduits like DonorsTrust and Leonard 
Leo’s network have funneled additional hundreds of millions more into Heritage, 
the Federalist Society, Hillsdale College, Turning Point USA, the Cato 
Institute, ALEC, and the rest of the Powell ecosystem.

Then there’s Rupert Murdoch, who brought his Australian poison to America with 
a little help from Ronald Reagan, built Fox “News” into the propaganda flagship 
for the GOP, and then had to write a $787.5 million check to Dominion Voting 
Systems for knowingly broadcasting lies about the 2020 election.

And let’s not forget Elon Musk, who bought Twitter in 2022 and, according to 
peer-reviewed research published in Nature and the Queensland University of 
Technology study, tilted the X algorithm in mid-July 2024 to dramatically boost 
his own posts and Republican-leaning accounts. After that change, views on 
Musk’s posts surged 138 percent, and right-wing accounts saw engagement leaps 
that progressive accounts simply never get any more on billionaire-run social 
media.

So, step back and look at what all that money buys. It buys a constant drumbeat 
telling:

— Working-class white people that they should be afraid of Black and Hispanic 
neighbors,
— Women in the workplace are stealing their jobs,
— Gay and trans people are coming for their kids,
— Low or no taxes on billionaires will “trickle down” somehow despite 
forty-five years of evidence to the contrary,
— Deregulation will lower prices instead of raising them,
— Fossil fuels are essential and climate science is a hoax, and that
— Russia and Israel are our friends while Canada, Germany, and France are our 
enemies.

It’s a deliberately constructed fog of lies and grievance, and it has one 
purpose: to keep us screaming at each other about bathrooms and brown-skinned 
invaders while the people writing the checks rob us blind.

And the scale of that robbery is genuinely staggering. The most recent RAND 
Corporation working paper by Carter Price, updated in 2025, calculates that 
since 1975 a cumulative $79 trillion has been “redistributed upward” from the 
bottom 90 percent of Americans to the top 1 percent.

In 2023 alone, the transfer to the morbidly rich was $3.9 trillion, enough to 
give every working American a $32,000/year raise. Meanwhile, we’re still the 
only developed country on earth without a national health care system, our kids 
go into a lifetime of debt to attend college, our infrastructure is crumbling, 
and we’re falling further behind Europe and China every year on the 
clean-energy transition that climate science says we have maybe a decade to get 
right.

Republicans don’t have any real answers for any of the crises we’re creating, 
because their actual policy agenda (more tax cuts for billionaires, more 
deregulation for monopolists, more handouts to fossil fuels) both caused most 
of these problems and is also wildly unpopular when stated plainly.

So they manufacture the rage, pay the influencers, bias the algorithms, fund 
the think tanks, bankroll rightwing podcasts, radio and TV, and then coordinate 
and pay for the talking points in private group chats.

They have to do it this way because if American working people ever stopped to 
add up what’s actually been done to them over the past forty-five years of the 
Reagan Revolution, the political landscape would shift overnight.

This should be a national scandal. It should be the lead story on every 
progressive show, in every Democratic stump speech, in every union newsletter, 
and on every front page.

Ashley St. Clair has handed us a confession that Democrats need to use. Call 
your senators and representatives at the Capitol switchboard at (202) 224-3121 
and demand legislation requiring full disclosure of paid political messaging by 
online influencers, the same way every other form of paid political advertising 
is regulated.

Make sure your registration is current at vote.org. Find out who’s running for 
your state legislature and county offices at openstates.org, because that’s 
where the next round of voter-suppression and gerrymandering fights will be won 
or lost.

And the next time somebody in your life forwards you a piece of viral 
right-wing outrage, ask them one simple question: who paid for that post?

The answer, more often than not, will be a rightwing billionaire or the fossil 
fuel, pharma, insurance, tech, or banking industry that made them rich. And 
once people know that, the spell starts to break.

Pass it along.

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