[...] [Haim] Saban wasn’t even interested in politics until he met Bill Clinton during his first term as President. The meeting was brief, but the friendship grew as Clinton made dozens of trips to California during his presidency. Clinton, Saban says, ignited his interest in using his resources to find solutions to strife in the Middle East. He soon became the Democratic Party’s largest single donor. “I don’t say this lightly,” says Terry McAuliffe, head of the Democratic National Committee at the time. “Haim Saban saved the Democratic Party.” Now Saban is turning his energies to Hillary Clinton. “I think he likes her better than he likes me,” jokes Bill Clinton. But as he talks about Saban’s support of Senator Clinton, the former President turns serious. “It is something that” – he pauses – “I can hardly talk about it because it really makes me emotional, ’cause he has genuinely come to love and respect her.” Under current campaign-finance laws, donors can give only $2,300 to a candidate’s primary run and another $2,300 for the presidential run. That means that to raise the big money, fundraisers like Saban have to knock on a lot of doors. “He makes all those miserable calls you have to make to get your friends to contribute,” says Steven Rattner, managing principal of New York-based investment firm Quadrangle and an active Democrat. “He’s quite relentless.” For Senator Clinton’s run, he has hosted events at his office and at his Beverly Park estate, a sprawling mansion in a gated community that is also home to Reba McEntire, Rod Stewart, Sylvester Stallone, Denzel Washington, and Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone. Saban, Steven Spielberg, and News Corp. (Charts, Fortune 500) executive Peter Chernin are hosting another fundraiser for Clinton in late May. He tells of traveling with her on his jet (she paid her way, he insists) when the pilot informed him an engine had gone out. Saban says he excitedly conveyed this information to Clinton, who thanked him and went back to her reading. He later asked her how she managed to stay so calm. According to Saban, Clinton explained that she was in the middle of a good paragraph in her book and that there was little she could do about the situation, so why freak out? “This is magnificent!” Saban practically shouts. “This is what you want in a leader. Nobody touches her. She’s really the most qualified candidate.” [...]
Haim Saban (who brought the Power Rangers to the U.S.) is a candidate… among plenty.
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There are thousands of multimultimillionaires supporting her. Not really possible to say, beyond the strong likelihood (imo) that that person is based in NYC.
NYC? Interesting.