By Daniel Greenfield, @ Sultan Knish Blog
For only $27, you can buy a ‘Tax the
Rich’ t-shirt and help an elderly progressive millionaire fly around the
country to campaign against the oligarchy from the luxury of a private
jet.
Sen. Bernie Sanders has been touring the country on his
‘Fighting Oligarchy Tour’ in which the elderly senator and assorted
socialist sidekicks like AOC hold rallies in liberal areas to denounce
big business…while doing some pretty big business.
Earlier this
year, Sen. Bernie Sanders, who is 83 years old, filed to run for
reelection in 2030 to be able to take office at the age of 89, and hold
it until he is well in his mid 90s. Aspiring to spend nearly half a
century in the halls of Congress would seem like evidence of oligarchy.
But
despite having a campaign date in 2030, Bernie quickly shot to the no. 2
spot in current year campaign spending. Over $1 million went to Aisle
518 Strategies, a ‘progressive’ campaign operation created by Tim
Tagaris, Bernie’s former senior advisor and digital fundraising
director, for digital advertising, but as capitalists would say, you
have to spend money to make money.
Over $220,000 went to private
jet firms including $102K to Cirrus Aviation, which claims to have a
“fleet of 30 luxury jets”, $80K to Ventura Jets, which describes itself
as “New York’s Premier Luxury Jet Charter Service”, and $38K to N-Jet
which pitches potential customers on “a flying experience that’s all
about you in your luxury aircraft.” The social media accounts for the
private jet charter firms show very wealthy people like Bernie enjoying a
luxurious lifestyle.
A video clip appears to show AOC and Bernie
dismounting from a Challenger 604 jet. This $5 million jet is usually
used for international flights, rather than local travel the way that
the two socialist politicians were using it, and offers “the ultimate
experience in luxury air travel” allowing passengers to enjoy “the same
comforts that one would expect at home or at a Five-Star hotel.”
Does
Bernie Sanders really hate billionaires or does he just want to be one?
With three houses and a net worth of over $2 million, Bernie has
amassed enough to make him greedy for more.
But the most troubling thing about Bernie may be his own private little oligarchy.
The
Sanders Institute was co-founded by Bernie’s wife, Jane O’Meara
Sanders, previously under FBI investigation over the collapse of
Burlington College over allegations of bank fraud along with a
sweetheart deal for her daughter, Carina Driscoll, a perennial political
candidate.
The other co-founder and CEO of the Sanders Institute
is David Driscoll, Bernie’s stepson and Jane’s son, who has been paid
an estimated $800,000 for his services after previously working for
Burton Snowboards: a snowboarding company owned by a Bernie supporter.
Its only other officially listed employee is Shana Frahm, Jane’s press
secretary, who had also worked for Burton Snowboards. Jane serves as a
‘fellow’ but her compensation has not been disclosed.
The Sanders
Institute is officially a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, but its funding comes
from the Bernie Sanders campaign which kicked it off with a $350,000
donation in 2020, since then $755,000 has been moved from the Sanders
campaign into the Sanders Institute.
Between 2023-2024, the
Sanders Institute was the second largest recipient of cash from ‘Friends
of Bernie Sanders’ after his actual 2020 campaign. And this campaign
cash also made up a sizable share and occasionally the majority of the
money funding the Sanders Institute.
These payments to an
organization founded by Bernie Sanders family members, which employs his
family members, and exists to promote him were described by the
campaign as a “charitable donation” even though they were obviously
providing a sizable benefit to the Sanders family.
That’s part of
a long history of Bernie figuring out ways to move campaign funds to
his family, including creating a department run by his wife, when he
served as mayor of Burlington. When he ran for Congress, she took a
sizable cut of his donations by acting as his media buyer, and put her
daughter on his staff.
Things escalated when Sanders backed a
proposal to move nuclear waste from Vermont to a small town in Texas and
to add insult to injury, Jane, despite no apparent qualification, was
appointed to a paying position as an alternate commissioner for the
Texas Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact Commission.
There
is an inescapable pattern with Bernie’s campaigns going back decades.
Between 2003 and 2004, Leadership Strategies, a consulting firm where
Jane served as CEO, was the second largest recipient of Bernie’s
campaign spending. The tenth was his stepdaughter. In 2016, when Sen.
Bernie Sanders suddenly became a national figure, $82 million poured
into a mysterious company for media buys linked to Jane’s associates.
Nearly every listed job for Bernie’s wife involved benefits from his
offices as mayor, congressman, senator and political candidate.
How much of that money did Bernie benefit from? He hasn’t been transparent about it.
But
why does an 83-year-old man file in 2025 to run for office in 2030? Why
does he go on a tour around the country? One answer is that the Sanders
Institute isn’t going to fund itself.
The ‘Fighting Oligarchy’ tour claims that it’s “scaring the hell out of Elon Musk”. But mostly it’s raising money.
The
front page has two seperate donate links at the top and a store where
students struggling with debt can buy a “Cancel All Student Debt”
sweatshirt for only $45. A ‘Tax the Rich’ t-shirt goes for $27 whose
proceeds can be used to help fund Bernie’s next ride in a private jet.
Under
the slogan “Not Me, Us”, the Fighting Oligarchy Tour is raising money
for ‘me’ which then goes to pay for Bernie’s private jets and to
subsidize members of his family.
The Bernie and AOC tour isn’t actually fighting oligarchy. It’s funding oligarchy.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.

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