Jeff Bezos Clashes with NYC Mayor Over Billionaire Taxes
L'essentiel
- Jeff Bezos argued that doubling his taxes wouldn't help a Queens teacher, sparking a retort from NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani.
- Bezos proposed eliminating federal income tax for lower earners, while Mamdani focused on taxing the wealthy to fund the city.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Jeff Bezos, during an interview on CNBC, expressed his view that increasing his tax bill would not significantly benefit ordinary citizens like a teacher in Queens. This statement drew a sharp response from New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who disagreed. The discussion touches upon broader debates about wealth inequality and taxation policies.
Jeff Bezos walked into a CNBC studio Wednesday and walked out with a fresh fight on his hands. The Amazon founder told Andrew Ross Sorkin on “Squawk Box” that doubling his tax bill wouldn’t move the needle for a teacher in Queens. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani heard about it within hours. The mayor’s response, posted on X, was short and unimpressed: “I know a few teachers in Queens who would beg to differ.” The exchange started when Sorkin asked Bezos about Democratic calls to tax billionaires harder. Bezos said he pays “billions of dollars in taxes” already and is open to debating whether he should pay more. But he kept circling back to one line. “You could double the taxes I pay and it’s not gonna help that teacher in Queens, I promise you,” he said.
Bezos wants zero federal income tax for bottom-half earners, not a discount
Bezos went further than the usual billionaire defense. He wants federal income tax for the bottom half of US earners scrapped entirely—not lowered, not tweaked. The bottom half currently pays about 3% of all federal income tax. The top 1% pays roughly 40%. “I don’t want to reduce it, I want to eliminate it,” Bezos said. “There’s something very powerful about zero. Zero is a better number than $1.” His go-to example was a Queens nurse earning $75,000 a year who pays more than $12,000 in taxes.
Mamdani’s ‘beg to differ’ jab lands amid the New York pied-à-terre tax fight
Mamdani didn’t engage the income-tax pitch directly. His one-line reply did its work on its own, going viral within the hour. His wider campaign has been built around taxing the wealthy to plug New York’s budget gap. The bigger fight in the background is New York’s first-ever pied-à-terre tax, a proposal backed by Governor Kathy Hochul that would put an annual surcharge on non-primary residences worth $5 million or more. The city projects $500 million in yearly revenue. The comptroller’s office pegs the figure lower, around $340–380 million, once owners shuffle their holdings. Bezos, who keeps a place in the city and would likely pay it himself, called the tax “a fine thing for New York to do.”
Why Bezos says New York has a spending problem, not a billionaire problem
What he wouldn’t sign off on was the staging. Mamdani’s April 14 video, filmed outside Citadel CEO Ken Griffin’s $238 million Central Park South penthouse, drew a hard line. “Ken Griffin isn’t a villain. He hasn’t hurt anybody,” Bezos said. The real issue, he argued, is spending. New York City spends $44,000 per student, more than Houston or Chicago, with worse outcomes. “If we ran Amazon the way New York City runs their school system, your packages would take six weeks to arrive,” he said, adding the company would have to tack on a $100 delivery fee and the package would still show up with the wrong item.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
The debate over taxing the wealthy will continue to be a prominent issue in New York City politics.
Très probable · En quelques mois
New York City will likely implement or further refine taxes on high-value properties and wealthy individuals.
Probable · Moyen terme
Questions ouvertes
- What is the exact tax burden of the 'Queens teacher' Bezos referenced?
- What specific budget deficits is Mayor Mamdani aiming to address with increased taxes?
- How will the pied-à-terre tax impact property markets in New York City?
- What are the projected outcomes of New York City's school system spending compared to other cities?
