
Jane Mayer's bestselling expose unmasks how billionaires secretly reshape American politics. Finalist for multiple prestigious awards, this investigative masterpiece reveals how the Koch brothers' network influences everything from Supreme Court decisions to environmental policy. The Washington Post called it "deeply researched and studded with detail."
Jane Mayer, the Pulitzer Prize-nominated investigative journalist and bestselling author of Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right, is renowned for exposing corporate influence and political corruption.
A staff writer at The New Yorker since 1995, Mayer’s expertise spans national security, dark money networks, and conservative power structures, themes central to her groundbreaking political nonfiction.
Her career began as The Wall Street Journal’s first female White House correspondent, where she covered historic events like the Gulf War and the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Mayer’s 2008 exposé The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals—a National Book Award finalist—pioneered her signature investigative rigor, later applied to unmasking the Koch brothers’ political machinery in Dark Money.
A frequent commentator on PBS, Democracy Now!, and C-SPAN, her work has shaped public discourse on democracy and transparency. Dark Money, a New York Times bestseller, is widely cited as a pivotal account of modern political funding and was named one of the decade’s top journalism works by NYU.
Dark Money exposes how libertarian billionaires, particularly Charles and David Koch, funded a decades-long campaign to reshape American politics through undisclosed donations. Mayer traces their network's origins, from their father's radical John Birch Society ties to their creation of think tanks, academic programs, and political groups advocating deregulation and tax cuts. The book reveals how "dark money" undermined democratic processes to advance corporate interests.
This book is essential for readers interested in political influence, corporate power, and modern conservatism. Policymakers, activists, and voters will gain insights into how undisclosed funding distorts elections and policy. It’s particularly relevant for those concerned about wealth inequality, environmental regulations, and the erosion of democratic institutions.
Yes—Mayer’s rigorous five-year investigation, backed by interviews and document analysis, offers a chilling exposé of systemic corruption. It’s a definitive account of how a small group of billionaires leveraged wealth to shift political power, making it critical for understanding modern U.S. politics.
Charles and David Koch, heirs to a fossil fuel empire, spearheaded a libertarian network to dismantle government oversight. Using inherited wealth, they funded organizations like the Cato Institute and Americans for Prosperity, pushing policies that benefited their industries while promoting anti-tax, anti-regulation ideologies.
"Dark money" refers to untraceable funds funneled through nonprofits and shell organizations to influence elections and policy. Mayer highlights how the Koch network exploited legal loopholes to obscure donations, enabling billionaires to sway politics without public accountability.
Mayer traces the Koch family’s radical roots, including their father Fred’s work with Stalin’s USSR and Nazi Germany, and his John Birch Society activism. This legacy shaped the brothers’ anti-government views and their strategy to infiltrate institutions to advance libertarianism.
The book argues that libertarian elites prioritized corporate profits over public welfare, weakening environmental protections, labor rights, and tax fairness. Their influence skewed political representation, privileging wealthy donors over ordinary citizens.
Some scholars argue Mayer overstates the Koch network’s cohesion and underestimates grassroots conservative movements. Critics also note the book focuses narrowly on libertarian billionaires, overlooking other radical right factions.
With corporate lobbying and untraceable political spending still prevalent, Mayer’s work underscores ongoing threats to democracy. The Koch network’s tactics, such as funding climate denialism and voter suppression, continue influencing policy debates.
Mayer combined archival research, court records, and over 300 interviews—including insider accounts—to map the Koch network. Her reporting revealed hidden funding trails and coordination between donors, politicians, and advocacy groups.
Unlike narrower studies, Mayer’s book connects historical libertarian ideology to modern political machinery. It offers a more comprehensive view than works focusing solely on campaign finance or specific elections.
While not prescriptive, Mayer implies stricter campaign finance transparency and antitrust enforcement. The book advocates public awareness to counterbalance billionaire-funded disinformation campaigns.
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As Charles and David Koch amassed one of the world’s great fortunes in the oil business, they quietly poured hundreds of millions of dollars into a sophisticated network of think tanks, political front groups, and media outlets.
Taxes were theft, and the New Deal was a ruinous turn toward socialism.
Charles's aim was to tear the government out "at the root."
He was driven by some deeper urge to smash the one thing left...the government.
Wealthy right-wing donors had rebranded themselves from "economic royalists".
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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The story begins in a Washington hotel room in January 2009, where a secret meeting unfolded that would fundamentally alter American politics. As Barack Obama prepared for his inauguration, promising hope and bipartisanship, a group of extraordinarily wealthy conservatives gathered to plan what Charles Koch would later call "the mother of all wars" against the incoming president. This wasn't merely political opposition-it was the culmination of a decades-long project by some of America's richest families to transform the nation's political landscape. What makes this story so compelling is how meticulously it traces the hidden web of influence that has quietly reshaped American democracy while remaining largely invisible to the public. Think about it: how often do we truly understand who's pulling the strings behind the political theater we witness daily?