Posted by Alumni from TechCrunch
January 18, 2026
If you've been following the billionaire exodus from California with some confusion, here's what's actually driving the nervousness: it's not the 5% rate. As highlighted Friday in the New York Post, the proposed wealth tax would hit founders on their voting shares rather than the actual equity they own. Take Larry Page, who about 3% of Google but controls roughly 30% of its voting power through dual-class stock. Under this proposal, he'd owe taxes on that 30%. For a company valued in the hundreds of billions, that's a lot more than a rounding error. The Post reports that one SpaceX alumni founder building grid technology would face a tax bill at the Series B stage of the company that would wipe out his entire holdings. David Gamage, the University of Missouri law professor who helped craft the proposal, thinks Silicon Valley is overreacting. 'I don't understand why the billionaires just aren't calling good tax lawyers,' he told The San Francisco Standard this week. Gamage insists... learn more