June 23, 2023
Soros Scion to Lead Father’s Progressive Powerhouse, ‘More Political’ Than Namesake
One of the most powerful forces in progressive politics announced he’s stepping away and named his son as successor. The plan means there could be big changes coming to the organization behind some of the worst criminal prosecutors across the country – and not good changes.
Billionaire and the mega-backer of soft-on-crime politicians and prosecutors George Soros announced he’s stepping aside from leading the Open Society Foundation, his nonprofit that spends $1.5 billion every year on Left-wing causes and politicians at every level. That includes big spending through Democracy PAC, Soros’ political action committee that widely and unabashedly backs “criminal-justice-reform prosecutors.”
Soros named his 37-year-old son, Alex, to man the ship, who could push for big changes within some of America’s worst cities for crime, many of which are already known as criminal safe havens and for having antigun, anti-Second Amendment policies that only harm law-abiding Americans.
Out With the Old
George Soros has been on a progressive political spending spree, becoming one of the biggest donors to Democratic political candidates. During the 2022 election cycle, his political giving was north of $175 million and earned him the distinction as “the biggest disclosed Democratic donor in the 2022 election cycle,” according to POLITICO. Soros’ political contributions were made personally, and through his Open Society Foundation and a “complex network of nonprofits,” according to CNBC.
Federally, political donations included sizable contributions to Senate Majority PAC, the flagship Senate super PAC charged with keeping Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) in charge of the upper chamber; the special election campaign of U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), a supporter of strict gun control measures; and the House Majority PAC, the main House Democratic super PAC that tried to keep former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) in charge.
Soros’ political giving also benefitted the failed gubernatorial campaign of Stacey Abrams in Georgia, who unsuccessfully challenged popular Gov. Brian Kemp. Abrams made strict gun control a major plank of her pitch to voters. Gov. Kemp made Second Amendment rights a pillar of his campaign and delivered on signing into law Constitutional carry.
Perhaps the elder Soros’ long history of backing soft-on-crime prosecutors in some of the country’s most dangerous cities is what his legacy could ultimately be. His political contributions benefitted Chicago’s Cook County Prosecutor Kim Foxx, who repeatedly went soft on some of Chicago’s worst criminals over the past two years. That included creating an uproar after refusing to charge several criminals after they exchanged gunfire between cars and a home with police officers nearby. One person was killed and five others were taken into custody. Despite the clear video evidence, Foxx did nothing.
Soros’ operations also backed Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s election in New York City and helped initially elect now-recalled San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin. Voters had enough of the soft-on-crime violence in San Francisco and booted him from office.
It also can’t be dismissed that George Soros has deep ties to state attorneys general that backed Mexico’s $10 billion lawsuit against firearm manufacturers. That case was dismissed by a federal court but is being appealed.
In With the New
Many considered Soros’ 52-year-old son Jonathan next in line. But George Soros jumped over, Jonathan, and instead named Alex captain. Alex made his agenda known immediately.
“I’m more political than my dad,” he told Wall Street Journal.
He used political “whataboutism” to legitimize his heavy-handed approach to keep the money spigots flowing generously to promote candidates who fit his gun control, soft-on-crime beliefs.
“As much as I would love to get money out of politics, as long as the other side is doing it, we will have to do it,” he said.
It will be a role with which he’s not unfamiliar. Alex Soros ascended to the top of the family businesses coming from his role as executive director of Democracy Now PAC, the major Soros Democratic political super PAC, according to Wall Street Journal.
Additionally, Washington Examiner reported on the younger Soros’ recent rise in prominence among major Democratic political figures on the national level. Those include continued meetings with Senate Majority Leader Schumer, former Speaker Pelosi, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and, of course, holding several meetings at the White House with advisors for President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.
Raise the Stakes
The stakes for Second Amendment supporters across the country couldn’t be higher as Alex Soros officially takes the leading role at Open Society Foundation and the many Soros-funded groups that play in politics.
In the U.S. Senate, pro-gun control Democrats hold a slim 51-49 majority and have legislative control over floor proceedings. Senate seats in West Virginia and Montana could flip from Blue to Red and there are others that look favorable to flip as well.
In the U.S. House of Representatives, pro-Second Amendment Republicans currently hold only a five-seat majority that will shrink to four seats when Rep. Chris Stewart (R-Utah) steps down in September to be home with his wife through an ongoing health emergency.
In the states, Kentucky, Louisiana and Mississippi all hold high-profile gubernatorial and attorney general elections that will have significant impacts on the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding Americans. Soros will undoubtedly be involved and throw his father’s “criminal justice reform” and “soft-on-crime” money in those races.
Americans have overwhelmingly supported elected leaders who protected Second Amendment rights so far during the 2023 state legislative sessions as Axios reported, the younger Soros may end up in the company of Michael Bloomberg. After spending more than $1 billion in elections to buy more gun control recently, that antigun billionaire came up with “huge losses.”
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Examining the Soros Connection to AG’s Supporting Mexico’s Gun Manufacturer Lawsuit
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