Sen. Bernie Sanders highlighted the growing concentration of wealth among America’s richest individuals, using the occasion of a “March for Billionaires” rally in San Francisco to satirically critique the billionaire class. Sanders, himself a three-home-owning millionaire with a net worth of at least $2 million, contrasted his own relatively modest wealth with the extreme fortunes of billionaires such as Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Larry Ellison, and Elon Musk.
“Let me applaud the billionaire class for organizing a ‘March for Billionaires’ rally on Saturday in San Francisco. It’s about time billionaires demonstrated to the world the kinds of pain and suffering they’re facing. Ordinary people just don’t get it,” Sanders wrote, framing the rally as a public demonstration of what he described as the “hardships” faced by the ultra-rich.
Let’s have a little sympathy for the struggling billionaire class. pic.twitter.com/iQLRE9iN2F
— Bernie Sanders (@BernieSanders) February 9, 2026
Sanders then detailed specific challenges for individual billionaires. For Bezos, he highlighted the difficulty of staffing multiple homes and running The Washington Post after layoffs. Zuckerberg’s challenges included operating a 387-foot superyacht and navigating the legal complexities of a family compound in Palo Alto. Ellison, Sanders said, had to contend with a $49 billion loss in net worth from Oracle stock declines while running a sprawling media empire. Musk, meanwhile, faces the “tough job” of managing his own incorporated city in Texas in addition to Tesla, SpaceX, X, and the Boring Company.
Sanders also criticized the broader practices of the top 1%, noting the effort required to legally avoid paying hundreds of billions in federal income taxes and to secure tax rates lower than those of average Americans. “Do you have any idea how much effort is involved for the top 1% to avoid paying $163 billion a year in federal income taxes that they legally owe?” he wrote.
Highlighting the staggering growth of wealth under President Donald Trump, Sanders added, “While the top 1% owns more wealth than the bottom 93%, let me thank the billionaires for organizing a march on Saturday. The world needs to understand just how difficult life has become for the struggling billionaire class that has become $1.5 trillion richer since Trump was inaugurated.”
By combining pointed satire with factual details about billionaire wealth, Sanders framed the “March for Billionaires” as both a literal event and a symbolic illustration of growing inequality, emphasizing the contrast between the experiences of ordinary Americans and the extraordinary resources wielded by a handful of individuals.







