Scott's
Billionaire
Fan Club

Abundant Future PAC is a super PAC formed by Scott Wiener's biggest fans: billionaires and tech executives who love him so much they built their own political operation to get him to Congress.

When your super PAC's top donors are a man who gave $4.9 million to Trump's inauguration and a CEO who tweeted death wishes at city supervisors before keynoting a Heritage Foundation conference, maybe it's worth asking: what exactly are they buying?

"San Franciscans are very savvy, and I think people can smell a fake a mile away." — Scott Wiener, March 27, 2026

Charter Members
Meet Scott's Biggest Fans
Garry Tan
Garry Tan
CEO, Y Combinator  ·  Commands ~$200B Portfolio
"Die slow motherfuckers." — Garry Tan, tweeted at seven SF supervisors by name, January 2024
"Die slow motherfuckers." — Garry Tan, tweeted at seven SF supervisors by name, January 2024
Tan has been one of the most aggressive political operators in San Francisco in recent years. His record goes well beyond a super PAC check: tweeting death wishes at elected officials (three supervisors subsequently received physical death-threat mailers at their homes; at least four filed police reports), bringing J.D. Vance to speak at Y Combinator, publicly praising DOGE, and keynoting a 2024 SF conference co-sponsored by the Heritage Foundation (the authors of Project 2025) alongside its president Kevin Roberts.
"Garry's List": His New Dark-Money Operation In February 2026, Tan launched a 501(c)(4) that hides its donors while spending on California races across all 58 counties. Its blog has called public-sector unions "a $921M special interest machine," labeled a teachers' strike "probably unlawful," and attacked the school district's equity enrollment lottery. Chris Larsen appeared at the launch event. Mission Local has the full story.
Chris Larsen
Chris Larsen
Co-Founder & Executive Chairman, Ripple Labs (XRP)  ·  Est. ~$15 Billion
"Ripple donated $4.9 million to Donald Trump's inauguration. Shortly after, the SEC cut Ripple's pending fine by $75 million and Trump added XRP to the official U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile." Fortune, Yahoo Finance, 2025
"Ripple donated $4.9 million to Donald Trump's inauguration. Shortly after, the SEC cut Ripple's pending fine by $75 million and Trump added XRP to the official U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile." Fortune, 2025
Larsen doesn't pick sides — he buys access to whoever wins. He gave millions to Kamala Harris in 2024, then pivoted to Trump the moment she lost. He also funded a $9.4 million private surveillance center for the SFPD — cameras later used to monitor Black Lives Matter protesters — bypassing competitive bidding and democratic oversight. The EFF called it "a billionaire buying police policy."
What else he's funded $48M via Ripple to FairShake PAC (crypto industry elections)  ·  $1.2M to London Breed's mayoral campaigns  ·  $250K to Prop E (expanded SFPD surveillance powers)  ·  $100K to Prop F (drug testing for welfare recipients)  ·  Hundreds of thousands to GrowSF, Abundant SF, and Neighbors SF
More Members of the Fan Club
Jeremy Stoppelman
Jeremy Stoppelman
Co-Founder & CEO, Yelp
Jeremy Liew
Jeremy Liew
Partner (ret.), Lightspeed Venture Partners
Dede Wilsey
Dede Wilsey
SF Philanthropist  ·  Heir to Dow Chemical fortune
Every single known donor to Abundant Future PAC has also donated directly to Scott Wiener's personal campaign. In practice, it functions as a second campaign fund for Scott Wiener.

Garry Tan has described his political project as building a "tech political machine" to replace existing civic institutions — schools, nonprofits, media, unions — modeled on Elon Musk's takeover of Twitter. He calls it the Network State.

Chris Larsen, meanwhile, launched Grow California, a political action committee to fight the proposed billionaire tax and weaken union political power in California.