Dave Regan, the president of SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West and the driving force behind California’s proposed billionaire tax, has made a remarkable assertion. Despite mounting evidence of high-profile departures, he insists that warnings about wealthy residents fleeing the state are “entirely fabricated.”
This claim arrives as the controversial measure heads to the November ballot, revealing a troubling disconnect between progressive rhetoric and economic fundamentals.
The California Billionaire Tax Act would impose a one-time 5% levy on the net worth of residents exceeding $1 billion as of January 1, 2026. Proponents project it could generate around $100 billion, with the bulk directed toward healthcare programs like Medi-Cal, alongside education and food assistance. Yet even Governor Gavin Newsom has voiced opposition, arguing that a state-level wealth tax risks driving away investment and talent. Regan, however, brushes aside such concerns, pointing to past predictions in Massachusetts that he says never materialized.
Reality paints a clearer picture. Reports confirm that multiple billionaires have already taken steps to sever or reduce their California ties before the January cutoff. Google co-founder Larry Page has invested heavily in Florida real estate. Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel has strengthened his Florida connections. David Sacks relocated from San Francisco to Austin. Sergey Brin has ties to both South Florida and Nevada’s Lake Tahoe area, while others like Steve Jurvetson and Naveen Rao have shifted toward the Nevada side of the border. Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Oracle’s Larry Ellison, and former Hewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman have also established significant footholds outside the state.
Tax advisers report helping multiple billionaire clients terminate residency ahead of the deadline, with projections that dozens more could follow if the measure passes. Wealth managers warn of potential broader flight, threatening the very tax base California relies upon.
These moves are not abstract; they reflect rational responses to policy signals that treat success as a target rather than an engine of prosperity. If the response materializes, it would mean that California will LOSE tax revenue over the long-term as a result of the Marxist grab.
Regan maintains there is “absolutely no evidence” of such exits, emphasizing that billionaires “can live wherever they want.” He frames the tax as a necessary emergency response to healthcare funding shortfalls, particularly amid potential federal changes.
Yet this overlooks how California’s existing high-tax, high-regulation environment has already contributed to population outflows among middle-class families and businesses for years. Adding a retroactive wealth grab risks accelerating that trend among the most mobile and productive residents.
The proposal’s defenders present it as a modest ask from those who have benefited most from California’s innovation ecosystem. But history and economics suggest otherwise. Wealth taxes prove notoriously difficult to administer, prone to valuation disputes, capital flight, and legal challenges.
Competing ballot measures backed by figures like Brin and former Google CEO Eric Schmidt aim to impose audits and restrictions that could blunt the tax’s impact if both pass. These countermeasures underscore deep skepticism even among some who built fortunes within the state.
Critics rightly note that such policies echo failed experiments elsewhere. Punitive taxation on capital distorts incentives, discourages investment, and ultimately burdens the very programs proponents claim to save.
California’s challenges with homelessness, crime, and service delivery stem not from insufficient extraction from the wealthy but from governance failures that misallocate resources and erode the conditions for wealth creation.
At its core, this debate touches on deeper principles of stewardship and justice. As the Apostle Paul wrote in his letter to the Ephesians, “Let him that stole steal no more: but rather let him labour, working with his hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that needeth” (Ephesians 4:28).
Biblical wisdom affirms the value of honest work, property rights, and voluntary generosity over coercive redistribution that presumes government knows best how to allocate the fruits of others’ labor.
California voters face a pivotal choice in November. Embracing class-warfare taxation under the guise of compassion may yield short-term political appeal, but it threatens long-term economic vitality. The state’s future depends not on squeezing the successful but on restoring an environment where enterprise can flourish and lift all boats.
Discernment demands rejecting the notion that wealth is a fixed pie to be divided rather than a dynamic force to be nurtured.


