- Warren Buffett's Annual Stock Gift to Gates Foundation Worth $1.8B This Year
- Florida Politicians Hold Their Noses and Pay Buffett's Berkshire $224 Million for Hurricane Pledge
- Warren Buffett's Advice to Young People Seeking Financial Independence
- Buffett's Berkshire Feels the Bear's Bite
- China Fund Manager to Pay Record $2.1 Million for Lunch with Warren Buffett
- Warren Buffett Charity Lunch Auction Ends with High Bid of $2,110,100
- Bidding Tops $300K for Warren Buffett Charity Lunch as Deadline Nears
- Warren Buffett's Incredibly Ordinary Visit to a "Drab" Industrial Neighborhood
- Lunch With Warren Buffett "Worth Every Penny" at $650,100
- TRANSCRIPT: Warren Buffett's Power Lunch Interview on "Exploding" Inflation
- Bowyer: Back to Monarchy in Land Rights?
- Parking Cash in European Telecoms
- Bargain Stocks: Nokia, Spectra, Incitex Pivot
- Sticker Shock: Fast Money's Inflation Special
- Our Favorite Inflation Trades
- Warren Buffett's Annual Stock Gift to Gates Foundation Worth $1.8B This Year
- That '70's Trade
- The Villain Of Our Story
- The Blame Game
- EU Opens Probe in BHP Billiton Bid for Rio Tinto
- Worse Car Sales Decline Expected in Western Europe
- Euro Banks Need to Raise $90-$140 Billion: Goldman
- BSkyB Mulls $4 Billion Bid for Spain's Digital Plus: FT
- On the Bright Side, Shopping Bargains Abound
- Euro Stocks Fall as Goldman Note Hits Banks
- Return of Asian Currency Crisis Is Unlikely: ADB
- European Shares Set to Open Flat as Holiday Shuts US
- Airbus to Sell Five A380s to Japan's ANA: Nikkei

![]() |
CNBC.com Photo Illustration |
The AP quotes University of Nebraska at Omaha political scientist Loree Bykerk as saying Buffett's reluctance to take the plunge suggests he still thinks the Democratic nomination is up for grabs. When he does decide, Warren's word will carry some weight. "Insofar as he's seen as an excellent decision-maker, very competent, down to earth, and with Middle American values, there's almost no downside to that endorsement," according to Bykerk.
But, of course, not everyone is embracing Buffett's political views, especially his very public, recent calls for the wealthy to pay more taxes. A widely distributed opinion piece by radio host Larry Elder asks if Buffett is suffering from a "Case of the Guilts?" and questions his assertion that he pays a lower tax rate than his secretary. Gerard Jackson writes from Australia on the Free-Market News Network site that Buffett "may be brilliant when it comes to picking stocks but .. he is a blithering buffoon" when he supports the Democrats.
And one of Warren Buffett Watch's loyal (we hope) readers had this to say in an email to us:
"Don't you find it interesting that Buffett was whining last week at a H. Clinton fundraiser that he paid less income tax to the Feds than his administrative assistant ... then this week gives $2B to Gates and other foundations? Using Mr. Buffett's flawed logic shouldn't he send the cash to Uncle Sam and help out with the deficit?"
Why are Warren's political proclamations getting more attention these days? The AP quotes Buffett biographer Andy Kilpatrick as saying it's at least partly due to "Buffett's growing visibility as a philanthropist."
Questions? Comments? Email me at





