Friday, September 7, 2018

The hidden power of the American oligarchs...and their political toys. Remember that it's your income they want to redistribute.


How eight elite San Francisco families funded Gavin Newsom’s political ascen



By SEEMA MEHTARYAN MENEZES AND MALOY MOORE

Gavin Newsom wasn’t born rich, but he was born connected — and those alliances have paid handsome dividends throughout his career.
A coterie of San Francisco’s wealthiest families has backed him at every step of his political rise, which in November could lead next to his election as governor of California.
San Francisco society’s “first families” — whose names grace museum galleries, charity ball invitations and hospital wards — settled on Newsom, 50, as their favored candidate two decades ago, said Willie Brown, former state Assembly speaker and former mayor of the city.
Left: Gavin Newsom in San Francisco one day after winning the mayoral election in 2003. (Robert Durrell / Los Angeles Times) Right: Newsom in Inglewood one day before the 2018 gubernatorial primary. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)
“He came from their world, and that’s why they embraced him without hesitancy and over and above everybody else,” said Brown, who is a mentor to Newsom. “They didn’t need to interview him. They knew what he stood for.”
A Times review of campaign finance records identified eight of San Francisco’s best-known families as being among Newsom’s most loyal and long-term contributors. Among those patrons are the Gettys, the Pritzkers and the Fishers, whose families made their respective fortunes in oil, hotels and fashion. They first backed him when he was a restaurateur and winery owner running for county supervisor in 1998, and have continued their support through the governor’s race.
They are not Newsom’s largest donors: The families in total have given about $2 million of the $61 million that donors have contributed to his campaigns and independent committees backing those bids. But they gave while he was a relative unknown, providing crucial support to a political newcomer in the years before his campaign accounts piled high with cash from labor unions, Hollywood honchos, tech billionaires and donors up and down the state.
Newsom’s faithful eight
Guggenhime
Buell
Swig
Marcus
$61.5 million
Wilsey & Traina
Total donations since 1998
Fisher
Getty
$2.2 million
Pritzker 
From consistent family donors
Now the families appear poised to see their investments pay off.
These donors are mostly liberal, inspired by Newsom’s history as an early supporter of progressive causes, including same-sex marriage as San Francisco mayor in 2004. But some are Republicans, including President Trump’s new ambassador to Austria, who are drawn by Newsom’s background as a small businessman.
The front-runner’s opponents have attacked him for his connections. During the primary, two of his Democratic rivals, Antonio Villaraigosa and John Chiang, painted Newsom as the beneficiary of wealth and privilege. John Cox, his GOP opponent in the November election, reiterated the theme in a new website titled “Fortunate $on.” And an independent expenditure committee supporting the Republican spent a quarter-million dollars late last month on an ad calling Newsom “a child of privilege, his path greased by family and political connections and billionaire patrons.”
Newsom, whose campaign did not respond to a request for comment on this article, has long been tied to San Francisco society.
His father, Bill, was a lifelong friend of Gordon Getty, the son of oil magnate J. Paul Getty — they attended high school together. Bill Newsom later managed the Getty family trust on behalf of Gordon, estimated by Forbes to be worth more than $2 billion in 2018. Bill Newsom was so close with the family that he helped deliver the ransom money after the 1973 kidnapping of J. Paul Getty’s grandson, John Paul Getty III.

The Gettys

 
One of the richest families in the United States. You’ve heard of them.
John Paul Getty
(deceased)
Adolphine Helmle
(deceased)
Jeannette Demont
(deceased)
Ann Rork
(deceased)
Jean Ronald 
Getty (deceased)
Karin Seibl
Billionaire founder of the Getty Oil Company and the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Jacqueline Getty
George Franklin Getty II (deceased)
Christopher R. Getty
$750
$500
Gail Getty
John Paul Getty Jr.
(deceased)
$500
He and Gavin Newsom own a wine production company together. They met through Newsom’s father, who was a close advisor to Gordon Getty.
Ann Getty
Gordon Getty 
$128,750
$145,850
Dollar amounts are total donated to Newsom
He’s Elizabeth Taylor’s son.
Ariadne Getty
$28,000
Christopher Wilding
John Getty
Andrew R.
Getty (deceased)
He’s a co-founder of photo company Getty Images
$250
Aileen Getty
$92,400
$500
Domitilla Getty
Mark
Getty
Peter Getty
Shannon
Bavaro
Andrew Wilding
$24,100
$1,750
$10,000
$500
J. Paul Getty III(deceased)
Gisela Zacher
$500
He was famously kidnapped and held for ransom when he was a teenager.
Alexander Getty
Tatum Getty
$28,200
$28,225
She’s Gisela’s daughter from another relationship and was later adopted by John Paul Getty III.
Balthazar Getty
Anna C. Getty
$10,500
$15,650
See all donations +
During Gov. Jerry Brown’s first tenure, he appointed Bill Newsom a judge, and the Newsom family had close ties to Willie Brown, former state lawmaker and California Democratic Party leader John Burton and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.
The Gettys’ support has played an important role in Gavin Newsom’s personal, professional and political life.

Top 5 Getty family donors

1. Gordon Getty, a lifelong friend of Gavin Newsom’s dad, has donated $145,850.
2. Ann Getty, an interior designer married to Gordon Getty, has contributed $128,750.
3. Actress and activist Aileen Getty has given $92,400.
4. Tatum Getty, who works in marketing and advertising and is married to Alexander Getty, has donated $28,225.
5. Photographer Alexander Getty has given $28,200.
He has said he was primarily raised by his mother, who at times struggled to make ends meet. But Gordon and Ann Getty viewed him as a son, according to interviews the couple gave to the San Francisco Chronicle and W Magazine, and they provided him with experiences his parents could not afford, including an African safari when he was a teen, Newsom said in an earlier interview with The Times.
“It all goes back to the Gettys as far as Gavin is concerned,” said Jerry Roberts, former managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle and an expert on Bay Area politics.
In addition to helping fund Newsom’s early business ventures, the family has been a mainstay as he pursued his political ambitions. Eighteen Gettys — including Gordon, Ann and actor Balthazar Getty — have collectively donated more than a half-million dollars to Newsom’s nine campaigns, starting with a total of $750 to his 1998 campaign for supervisor. Members of the family have spent more than $362,000 supporting his current gubernatorial bid.
A spokesman for the Gettys did not respond to a request for comment.
Through his friendship and business partnership with Gordon and Ann Getty’s son Billy, Newsom was at the center of the social scene led by the younger generation of San Francisco’s wealthy families. Those relationships would form the foundation of his life in politics.
Gordon Getty and Gavin Newsom attend an event benefiting the UCSF Childrens Hospital in 2010. (Drew Altizer)
“These kids had all grown up together, or played sports or gone to school together or later dated,” said Catherine Bigelow, a longtime San Francisco society writer. “In the early ’90s [they] didn’t want to go to the parties their parents were going to. Billy and Gavin opened a wine shop and restaurant when they took over the Balboa Café, creating this really cool scene.”
This was San Francisco before the tech boom and before social media. The Balboa Café, a Marina standard that Billy Getty and Newsom bought and updated, was described by the New York Times in 1998 as “a glittering nexus for Gen-X San Franciscans with social and political connections.”
That year, Newsom ran his first campaign: a bid to hold on to a county supervisor seat, which then-Mayor Willie Brown had appointed him to fill. At the time, the Chronicle wrote that Brown valued Newsom’s “easy familiarity with San Francisco’s upper crust.”
One check in 1998 came from Doris Fisher, the billionaire clothier who decades earlier founded the Gap in San Francisco with her husband. It was for $500, the most an individual could give, according to city law.

The Fishers 

Doris and Donald Fisher co-founded The Gap.
She’s one of California’s top individual political donors.
President of the San Francisco Symphony and a trustee of Stanford University
Donald Fisher
Doris F. Fisher
(deceased)
$45,550
$17,250
William S. Fisher
Sakurako D. Fisher
Robert J. Fisher
$40,700
$40,200
Elizabeth Stroud Fisher
$33,450
$47,450
He’s a trustee emeritus of the Exploratorium in San Francisco.
Co-founders of the Pisces Foundation, which provides grants to other nonprofits.
John J. Fisher
Laura M. Fisher
$40,950
$39,450
Has a majority stake in the Oakland Athletics
See all donations +
Newsom raised a little more than $55,000 and won a full term.
Running unopposed for the same seat in 2000, Newsom continued to court influential donors. Billionaire Bay Area real estate broker George Marcus and his wife, Judy, gave $500 donations to Newsom in 2000. They’ve given in tandem to his campaigns ever since.

The Marcuses

 
Billionaire George Marcus is the founder of Marcus & Millichap, one of the largest real estate companies in the country.
Judith and George both attended San Francisco State University in the 1960s and donated $3 million to open the university’s International Center for the Arts.
Previously a member of the Board of Regents of the University of California.
George Marcus
Judith Marcus
$85,750
$85,250
Mary Jane Marcus
$1,000
See all donations +
A few years later, Newsom raised $4 million in his first mayoral campaign, helped by the same famous families.
The bid drew donations from 15 different members of the Pritzker family, descendants of the founders of the Hyatt Hotel chain. For Lisaand husband John Pritzker, who moved away from his Chicago-based family to become a prominent San Francisco investor and philanthropist, the contributions were part of a long tradition of giving to Newsom. A spokesperson for John and Lisa Pritzker said they were unavailable for comment.
Top: Gavin Newsom and Lisa Pritzker attend the 2010 Modern Ball at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Left: Lisa Pritzker, John Pritzker, Elizabeth Stroud Fisher and Robert Fisher attend the SFMOMA Contemporary Vision Award. (Drew Altizer) Right: Judith Marcus (left) and George Marcus (second left) attend Bernini’s Medusa opening party at the De Young Museum in 2011. (Claudine Gossett / Drew Altizer Photography)
The money went toward a flood of last-minute phone calls and mailers in a race that polls deemed too close to call on election day. Newsom, then 36, defeated fellow Supervisor Matt Gonzalez by a slim margin to become the city’s youngest mayor in a century. Soon after he was sworn in, he drew national headlines by ordering the city to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

The Pritzkers

 
One of the wealthiest families in the United States, prominent in politics and philanthropy in San Francisco and Chicago.
Nicholas Pritzker
Annie Cohn
(deceased)
Rhoda Pritzker
(deceased)
Jack Pritzker 
(deceased)
Abram Pritzker
(deceased)
Fanny Doppelt
(deceased)
$750
Co-founder of Tao Capital, on the board of e-cigarette company JUUL Labs.
Donald
Pritzker
(deceased)
Jay
Pritzker
(deceased)
Sue Sandel
(deceased)
Marian
Friend
Susan Pritzker
Nicholas Pritzker
$72,250
$70,750
Co-founded the Hyatt hotel chain
Anthony
Pritzker
Jeanne
Pritzker
Mary 
Pritzker
Jay “J.B.”
Pritzker
$500
$500
$1,250
$750
Regan Pritzker
Jacob Pritzker
$44,350
$70,000
Penny S.
Pritzker
Isaac Pritzker
$750
$23,600
Served as U.S. secretary of Commerce under President Obama.
Co-founders of Neon Monster, a now-closed comics store in San Francisco.
Current Democratic candidate for governor of Illinois
Daniel
Pritzker
Karen
Pritzker
$500
$500
Jacqueline 
Pritzker
Joseph
Pritzker
$13,600
Thomas J. 
Pritzker
Margot L.
Pritzker
$70,000
$750
$750
John A. Pritzker
Lisa Pritzker
$94,650
$141,975
San Francisco philanthropists who have made sizable donations to the UC San Francisco Benioff Children’s Hospital and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
See all donations +
More than a dozen members of the Swig family also cut checks to Newsom during his first mayoral campaign. The family ran the iconic Fairmont Hotel, which was built atop the city’s Nob Hill in the 1930s, then expanded from a single luxury hotel into a worldwide chain.
Rick Swig, 67, said Newsom made a point of paying respect to the families who are the spine of San Francisco’s history, society and culture, what he called “the city’s DNA.”
“That’s important recognition that I think that we who have been born into those families find important,” said Swig, who has donated more than $30,000 to Newsom’s campaigns.
The Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco. (Kim Komenich / San Francisco Chronicle)
As the leader of San Francisco’s tourism bureau, Swig tangled with Newsom as mayor. Putting aside their differences, Swig said, they reached an agreement about tourism spending that ultimately benefited the city — the goal of all of the families who have been stalwart Newsom backers, he said.
“These are families that have been around for a long time. They’ve been very dedicated to supporting culture, supporting social causes and also putting their money where their mouths are, and keeping their businesses in San Francisco through the good times and the bad times,” Swig said. “There are guys in Washington who make fun of San Francisco values, but really San Francisco values are those that find their core in the families that have been around 75 to 150 years, who have supported everything … good about San Francisco — social, political and business. And Gavin recognizes that, appreciates that and respects that.”

The Swigs

 
They were once owners of the historic Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco.
Mae Swig
(deceased)
Benjamin Swig
(deceased)
He bought the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco in 1945.
She is a trustee emeritus at the San Francisco Art Institute.
His grandson Tyler was one of the whistleblowers at blood- testing company Theranos
Melvin Swig
(deceased)
Richard Swig
(deceased)
Roselyne C. Swig
$26,000
Marcia Hove
(deceased)
George P. Shultz
Charlotte 
Maillard Shultz
$1,250
$12,750
Susan Swig
Richardson
Watkins
$1,500
Former U.S. secretary of State
$1,500
Sari Swig
She’s planned special events at City Hall for every mayor since 1988.
Darian Swig
Rick Swig
$750
$9,250
$30,750
Kent M. Swig
Phyllis Diamond
(deceased)
$750
Adam Swig
Benjamin Swig
Steven L. Swig
Mary Green Swig
$1,000
$1,000
$23,000
$20,500
She was the founder of a lingerie company, which ceased operation in 2014.
See all donations +
Susie Tompkins Buell, the co-founder of clothing brand Esprit and outdoor retailer North Face, remembered Newsom as a young man.
“He was the boy about town. Everybody wanted to date him,” she said, recalling that one of her daughters was in a relationship with Newsom in the 1990s. “He was the smartest, the best-looking. He went through a cocky stage, and then an arrogant stage. Now he’s in a total serving stage. He paid his dues, I’ll tell you.”
Jennifer Siebel Newsom and Susie Tompkins Buell attend a NARAL Pro-Choice America luncheon in 2017 at the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco. (Susana Bates / Drew Altizer Photography)
Tompkins Buell said that while she always believed Newsom was charismatic and bright, she watched him mature as an elected official, husband and father.
“I’ve known him socially for a long time, but then when he was mayor, I observed a very evolving person as he handled his problems and grew into his job,” she said.
Tompkins Buell and her family have contributed more than $110,000 to Newsom’s political endeavors over the years, appreciative of his environmental and social policies, such as his efforts to redirect the city’s cash payments to San Francisco’s homeless to housing and services.
“I’ve watched him closely and I was very, very impressed by the quality of his visceral understanding of the problems we have,” she said.

The Buells

 
The Buells are Democratic fundraising powerhouses.
She and her ex-husband Doug Tompkins ran clothing companies Esprit and the North Face together.
Mark Buell
Susie 
Tompkins Buell
$26,450
$71,150
A designer who has worked with Jawbone, PUMA and Swarovski. 
She and the Clintons are close friends. She first met Bill Clinton at a fundraiser in Sacramento in 1991.
Sabrina Buell
Yves Behar
$2,250
$10,500
According to Behar’s Instagram, he and Sabrina wed at Burning Man in 2017.
See all donations +

Most loyal donors

These donors have consistently donated to Gavin Newsom since he was a restaurateur and winery owner sitting on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.
  1. Diane “Dede” B. Wilsey: donated to nine different campaigns
  2. Lisa Pritzker: eight campaigns
  3. George and Judith Marcus: eight campaigns each
  4. Doris F. Fisher: eight campaigns
  5. Ann Getty: seven campaigns
Tompkins Buell is a confidante of Hillary Clinton who has spent millions of dollars backing Democratic candidates and causes. But Newsom’s support among San Francisco’s elite crosses party lines.
“We’re one of the few long-term, old-school Republican families in the city. This says a lot about Gavin, that he gets out votes, too, because we’re looking at 80 years of Republicanism,” said filmmaker Todd Traina, son of the late shipping magnate John Traina and philanthropist Dede Buchanan Wilsey. His brother Trevor, also a Newsom donor, is Trump’s ambassador to Austria.
Altogether, 10 members of the Traina family have given more than a quarter-million dollars to Newsom’s campaigns.

The Trainas and Wilseys

 
A blended family of Democrats and Republicans — who come together to fund Gavin Newsom.
Alfred Wilsey
(deceased)
John Traina Jr.
(deceased)
She’s one of San Francisco’s most prominent socialites, raising money for civic institutions and political figures.
$500
$850
Diane B. “Dede” Wilsey
After John and Diane’s divorce, shipping magnate Traina married romance novelist Danielle Steel. 
$213,650
He’s a producer. His most recent film premiered at the San Francisco International Film Festival, where he serves on the board.
Mary K. Wilsey
Alfred Wilsey Jr.
(deceased)
$500
He’s the U.S. ambassador to Austria
$500
Barbara C.
Wilsey
Michael W. 
Wilsey
$2,500
Katherine Traina
Alexis Traina
Trevor Traina
Todd Traina
$3,000
$6,500
$10,000
$18,300
Brian Wilsey
$2,750
See all donations +
“We all separately backed him and we never internally talked about it,” Traina said, noting that he appreciated Newsom adding a businessman’s perspective to the county Board of Supervisors. “It wasn’t that we said we were making a family decision. It was more that we just all agreed that we liked him and we liked what he stood for.”
He added that his ties to Newsom go back to their time as teenagers, when Newsom attended Redwood High School in Marin County and Traina attended University High School in San Francisco.
“We were sports rivals and we had the same group of friends, and he just really had a winning personality and was very likable,” Traina said. “He was very similar to the way he is now — spunky, bright, charming, he lit up a room. I wouldn’t have known at the time he had a definite interest in politics, but he has always had the same personality.”
The Traina family roots go back to shipping magnate John Traina, who was married to Dede Buchanan and then romance novelist Danielle Steel. Buchanan, whose great-grandfather founded Dow Chemical, later married real estate magnate Alfred Wilsey. She remains a major philanthropic force in the city, notably raising more than $200 million to rebuild the earthquake-damaged De Young Museum.
“We deeply love the city and we love the traditions of the city, and we were brought up to be charitable and to understand the significant importance of giving back,” Todd Traina said.
Richard Guggenhime, a prominent San Francisco attorney who provides financial advice to wealthy families, has spent four decades working for various civic boards. Currently on the city’s airport commission, a position to which Newsom first appointed him, Guggenhime has given Newsom more than $30,000 in his bid to become governor. In 1998, his wife, Judy, now chairwoman of the San Francisco General Hospital foundation board, gave Newsom $250 to help kickstart his supervisor campaign.

The Guggenhimes

 
The Guggenhimes are San Francisco philanthropists.
Charlotte Guggenhime
(deceased)
Richard E. Guggenhime
(deceased)
Martha Guggenhime
(deceased)
$500
She’s chair of the board of directors of the San Francisco General Hospital Foundation.
He’s a prominent San Francisco lawyer and has served on many city government boards.
Judith H. Guggenhime
Richard Guggenhime
$2,000
$59,750
See all donations +
Roberts, the Chronicle’s former managing editor, said the role of San Francisco’s most prominent families in public life has shifted over the years. They have largely stopped seeking public seats, but still try to control the levers of power.
The longtime support for Newsom underscores that point.
“They phased out of any public visibility. But behind the scenes, they were still the ruling class,” Roberts said.

About this story
The Times compiled a complete list of Gavin Newson's donors by combining data from two sources: The San Francisco Ethics Commission and the California Civic Data Coalition's archive of data collected by California's secretary of state. The list includes every contributor disclosed in fundraising reports filed by five campaign committees during Newsom's time at San Francisco City Hall, plus four from his runs for state office.
Contributions to those committees are limited by local and state law, which is why donors frequently gave in similar amounts. Donors in the local races were capped at $500, with the exception of the 2003 mayor's race, where they were allowed to give $750. In the lieutenant governor's races, donors could give $13,000 in 2010 and $13,600 in 2014. The governor's race had the highest limits: $52,000 in the 2010 and $58,400 in 2018.
In addition, The Times also included monetary contributions to independent committees supporting Newsom's current campaign for governor. Candidates legally cannot coordinate with such groups, but the committees can accept unlimited amounts.
The donor list does not include the small contributors whose identities are not required to be disclosed by law.
The family trees inlcude only members who donated to Newsom, and their immediate ancestors. Donors frequently reported variations of the same name; to avoid confusion, names on the diagrams are as they appear on their most recent campaign contribution.
The data are as of Sept. 5.
Top photo: With Gavin Newsom, from left: Roselyne Swig and Judith Guggenhime at the Merchants Exchange Club in 2018. (Devlin Shand / Drew Altizer Photography) Second right: Robert Fisher and Newsom attend a gala at the California Academy of Science. Right: Willie Brown (foreground left) and Diane B. "Dede" Wilsey (foreground right) at the de Young Museum. (Drew Altizer)

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