From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Billionaires for Bush is a culture jamming
political street theater organization that
satirically purports to support George W. Bush for those activities
which are perceived to benefit corporations and the super-wealthy. A
secret New York City Police
Department intelligence report based on undercover surveillance
of the group in 2003 and 2004 in advance of the 2004 Republican
National Convention in New York City, described the Billionaires
as "an activist group forged as a mockery of the current president
and political policies."[1]
History
Forbes
1999
The organization had first been founded by Andrew Boyd as
"Billionaires for Forbes", but Forbes left the 2000 race for the
Republican Presidential nomination early due to a lack of adequate
voter support. In 1999, Billionaires were present as Steve Forbes
announced his candidacy for President and jeered him as he signed a
flat tax pledge in New Hampshire.[2] The
Billionaire Manual describes the action:
- They wore conservative jackets and ties (but no bowler hats,
etc.) and carried innocuous signs such as "Run, Steve, Run." Happy
to have grass-roots support, the Forbes handlers (who believed the
Billionaires were students from a nearby business school) placed
them in front of the cameras, very near to the podium from which
Forbes was speaking. However, each of their signs had another sign
behind it. And behind their banner (which read "Forbes 2000: He
wants YOU to win") was another banner, waiting. At the most
dramatic moment of his announcement, the Billionaires flipped their
signs, and pulled away the large banner to reveal one which read:
"Billionaires for Forbes: Because Inequality isn’t Growing Fast
Enough." The Billionaires started chanting "Let workers pay the tax
so investors can relax!" and other slogans. Forbes and his handlers
were completely thrown off, a little tussle ensued, and the
Billionaires were pushed off to the side away from the cameras. Not
wanting to miss the action, half the TV crews left the Forbes
speech to cover the Billionaires. The action got lots of
coverage.
Bush (or
Gore) 2000
During the 2000
U.S. presidential election the organization was led by Andrew
Boyd as "Billionaires for Bush (or Gore)," with the message that
whichever candidate became president, corporations and the wealthy
were guaranteed to benefit. The group spoke out under the motto
"Because Economic Inequality Is Not Growing Fast Enough".[3]
The group appeared at the 2000 Democratic
National Convention in Los Angeles,
California, satirically praising major corporations for their
financial support of the convention by attempting to deliver thank
you cards to Fleet Bank, Fidelity
Investments and Verizon Communications.[4]
The Billionaires planned a "Million Billionaires March" at the
2000 Republican
National Convention in Philadelphia held the day before the
convention. Other activities included a "Vigil for corporate
welfare" and an auction of corporate advertising rights for the
Liberty Bell.[5]
Bush 2004
At a March 2004 fundraiser on Long Island attended by President Bush,
Billionaires for Bush came to show their "support", with men
dressed in tuxedos with top hats and women in evening gowns and
long gloves. The groups laminated posters featured such slogans as
"Leave No Billionaire Behind" and "Corporations Are People
Too."[6]
Their largest events to date took place as part of the 2004
Republican National Convention protest activity. A separate
group, however, continued on in the plague-on-both-your-houses
style as Billionaires For Bush Or Kerry.
A "Million Billionaires March" on July 27, 2004, in conjunction
with the 2004 Democratic
National Convention in Boston,
Massachusetts, attracted 150 marchers who presented a faux
check made out for the amount of "whatever it takes" to the local
offices of the Republican Party, as part of an effort to "defeat"
Kerry.[7]
Lawsuits filed against the New York City Police
Department after the 2004 Republican Convention uncovered the
fact that Billionaires for Bush had been among groups infiltrated
by the NYPD by its undercover officers gathering intelligence in
advance of the convention.[8]
2005 and
beyond
Since 2004 the group remains active and uses the meme to raise awareness to a myriad of economic
issues including Social Security
privatization, the Iraq
War, the Estate Tax and gentrification.
The group is currently led by a triumvirate of co-chairs Elissa
Jiji, Marco
Ceglie, and Melody Bates.
Attire
Members typically dress in stereotypically wealthy attire, such
as tuxedos and top hats or evening gowns and pearls and adopt names like "Mo Bludfer Oyle"
(more blood for oil, a reference to the Iraq war) and "Phil T.
Rich" (filthy rich).
Members may also dress in less stereotypical attire to perform
more subtle pranks, as described in the Forbes example, above.
Events
Examples of Billionaire events include:
- Musical entertainment at anti-Bush events
- Thanking George W. Bush on his birthday for their
tax cuts
- Protesting protests of the Bush administration
- Taking a pro-war stance at peace rallies
- Cross-country limousine tours [9]
- A petition to allow oil drilling and logging of Golden Gate
Park in San Francisco
- Bush League baseball
These events and message are designed to attract friendly media
coverage.
Slogans
Some of their political slogans
include "Small Government, Big Wars,"[10]
"Because We're All In This Together, Sort Of,"[11] "Two
Million Jobs Lost — It's a Start," "Leave No Billionaire
Behind,"[1]
"Make Social Security Neither,"[12] and
"Corporations are People Too."[13]
See also
References
- ^ a
b
Dwyer, Jim. "Is Satire in a Slump? ‘Yes’
and ‘No’", The New York Times, February
16, 2008. Accessed August 20, 2008. "Outside an event in Manhattan
where Karl Rove, the president’s chief political strategist, was
speaking, the Billionaires ran a faux counterdemonstration (“Leave
No Billionaire Behind”) to a real one mounted by the Sierra
Club.... In a report stamped “N.Y.P.D. Secret,” the police wrote:
“Billionaires for Bush is an activist group forged as a mockery of
the current president and political policies.”"
- ^
Zuckman, Jill. "FORBES SIGNS N.H. ANTITAX
PLEDGE FLAT-TAX PROPOSAL PROTESTED AS ELITIST BY BOSTON GROUP",
The Boston
Globe, March 17, 1999. Accessed August 18, 2008. "But as
he stood with his back to the state capitol and promoted his
proposal to eliminate the current federal tax code and institute a
17 percent flat tax, protesters from Boston began chanting
billionaires for Forbes..."
- ^
DiFilippo, Dana. "FUNNY WAY TO RUN A
PROTEST", The
Philadelphia Daily News, July 29, 2000. Accessed August
18, 2008. "THE WAY MILLIE O'Nair sees it, it doesn't matter whether
George W. Bush or Al Gore wins the presidency.... Whoever wins,
we win! said O'Nair, who co-chairs Billionaires for Bush (or
Gore).
- ^
"Nader tossed off grounds at
debate site", CNN,
October 3, 2000. Accessed August 18, 2008. "Others -- dressed in
fake pearls and top hats -- dubbed themselves Billionaires for
Bush or Gore, and satirically praised the corporations helping
underwrite the debate.
- ^
Shaffer, Gwen. "C’mon Buy!", Philadelphia City Paper,
July 27, 2000. Accessed August 18, 2008. "The Billionaires may be a
hoax, but the events they’ve planned are very real, starting with a
Million Billionaire March the day before the convention."
- ^
Hitt, Jack. "The Birth of the
Meta-Protest Rally?", The New York Times, March 28,
2004. Accessed August 19, 2008.
- ^
Vozick-Levinson, Simon. "'Wealthy' Protesters Make
Case Outside DNC", The Harvard Crimson, July 30,
2004. Accessed August 18, 2008. "We therefore call upon all loyal
People of Wealth to defy the Democratic National Convention and
converge on the streets of Boston for a Million Billionaire March
on July 27. And converge they did—150 of them, according to those
who attended—to take back the streets for the silver-spoon set and
present a symbolic check in the amount of “whatever it takes” to
the local GOP headquarters."
- ^
"Editorial: The Convention
Papers", The New York Times, August 18,
2008. Accessed August 19, 2008."The department later said that its
actions were based on intelligence gathered by a special unit of
undercover officers who had infiltrated dozens of protest groups,
including innocuous ad-hoc outfits like the comical Billionaires
for Bush."
- ^
[1]
- ^
Trav S. D. "The Art of Party Crashing:
Artists and activists stockpile Dick Cheney jokes, Dubya drag, and
phalluses in preparation for the Republican invasion", the Village
Voice, July 27, 2004. Accessed August 19, 2008. "The use
of Republican drag and the just-short-of-plausible
pro-Bush sloganeering (Small Government. Big
Wars.) also help generate interest."
- ^
Montgomerry, David; and Vargas, Jose Antonio. "The Anti's Antidote For the
Bush Blues: Counter-Inaugural Ballgoers Don't See Red", The
Washington Post, January 21, 2005. Accessed August 19,
2008. "A banner across the stage read Billionaires for Bush --
Because We're All in This Together, Sort of."
- ^
Sycamore. "Inauguration Guide for
Pissed-Off Patriots", Daily Kos, January 13, 2005. Accessed August
20, 2008. "Some of their slogans: Make Social Security
Neither! Cashing In Your Children's Tomorrow...Today!
Taking from Main Street, Giving To Wall Street! No
Brokerage Firm Left Behind! Drain America
First!"
- ^
Trigaux, Robert. "Satire in the streets",
St. Petersburg Times, August
31, 2004. Accessed August 20, 2008. "They shouted slogans like
Four More Wars, sang songs skewering Republican economic
policy, and held signs ranging from Free Ken Lay,
Privatize Everything and Corporations Are People,
Too to Widen the Healthcare Gap and Outsource:
Because Cheap Labor Costs Less."
External
links