Chamath Palihapitiya, Silicon Valley mogul turned SPAC kingpin, wants to add a new title to his CV: governor of California.
“It’s on,” Palihapitiya tweeted late Monday night, adding the hashtag #RecallGavinNewsom. The tweet linked to a website, “chamathforca.com” which was titled “Chamath for California Governor.”
“California is a mess — it’s too expensive, our teachers are underpaid, and our schools aren’t good enough” was the provocative tagline.
California’s difficulties in dealing with the Covid pandemic and the wildfires that threaten residents in Northern California, along with its high costs and taxes, have led to a lot of grumbling among its citizens — and an exodus of Palihapitiya’s cohorts in the tech and investment world. These include people like Elon Musk, who is relocating himself and his Tesla electric car company to Texas.
Although some have questioned (on Twitter and to Institutional Investor) whether another billionaire is what the public is clamoring for after four years of the Trump presidency, that doesn’t seem to faze Palihapitiya, whose firm, Social Capital, is based in Palo Alto. For weeks, he has been tweeting about the state’s woes and hinting that he’d run for governor before apparently pulling the trigger.
The entrepreneur’s announcement quickly got 15.4 thousand likes. Among those applauding him was SkyBridge co-founder Anthony Scaramucci, the former Trump official and now Republican Party gadfly, who gave it the “on fire” emoji.
But others aren’t so sure. “He’s running in a recall election that doesn’t yet exist,” said Carson Block, the Muddy Waters Capital founder who is also critical of California Governor Gavin Newsom. Block said he has gone so far as to investigate the likelihood of the success of a Newsom recall and says he found there have been “dozens of recall attempts against California governors. Only one resulted in a recall election. That was Gray Davis.”
Block, who said he now plans to move his family to Austin, Texas, after aborting plans to move to New York City because of Covid concerns, said of Palihapitiya, “If he’s really serious about running for governor, I’d want to hear about the 2022 plans.”
Palihapitiya doesn’t say whether he is running as an independent or a Democrat, but he donated heavily to Democrats during the 2020 election cycle.
Finding out exactly what Palihapitiya stands for is another matter. His platform includes the elimination of the state income tax (whose highest marginal rate is 16 percent) and paying teachers a minimum annual salary of $70,000.
“Is there a f—— footnote on how this works?” asked Block. “We all want it. How do you get there?”
Palihapitiya did not return a request for comment.
On his website, Palihapitiya suggests that his plans to “drive growth” will increase the state’s revenue from $15 billion to $30 billion, solving the problem. (Institutional Investor)