Garry Tan sitting in a chair on stage, gesticulating with his hands
Garry Tan, then at Initialized Capital, on stage during day one of Web Summit 2022 at the Altice Arena in Lisbon, Portugal. Photo by Harry Murphy/Web Summit via Sportsfile, used under a Creative Commons 2.0 license.

Garry Tan, the local venture capitalist who has railed against progressive politicians in San Francisco for years and served as the intersection between tech and center-right politics in the city, is formalizing his influence operation.

Tan, the CEO of the vaunted startup incubator Y Combinator, announced Wednesday he had spun up a dark-money group called “Garry’s List,” which he described as a “voter education group” that is “dedicated to civic engagement, voter education and support for common-sense policies and candidates” in a press release.

Such groups give donors a way to anonymously support causes without giving directly to a candidate or a measure. 

“I want to work to ensure Californians know the importance of investment and entrepreneurship to our state’s current and future economy,” Tan wrote.

As a 501(c)4 nonprofit, Garry’s List will be able to spend money directly on candidates and ballot measures. It could also print voter guides, host in-person events, take out ads and run programs training the next generation of elected officials. Tan said he plans to do all of the above.

But the operation is also a media venture: Garry’s List started with a blog pillorying public-sector unions as “special interests,” attacking the ongoing teachers’ strike, and denouncing the proposed billionaire tax.

For years, Tan has called on tech executives to create “parallel” media and “replace the unelected parts of the system,” like unions and nonprofits. “We need our own machine,” he said in 2023.

Tan has long been a voice espousing tough-on-crime, law-and-order politics in San Francisco. He has spent nearly half a million dollars in local races since 2015, and is known locally for his brashness: He once tweeted that seven of the city’s supervisors — all progressives — should “die slow motherfuckers” in a late-night polemic. The tweet, which Tan said was a joke, prompted hateful mail and police reports.

He is now eyeing statewide change. Tan said he would “take the same education and engagement we used to turn around San Francisco” to all of California, and told the San Francisco Standard he pined for the “energy that I felt when we were first working on the recall of Chesa Boudin and the school board” in 2022. 

A post on X from Garry Tan wishing death upon San Francisco supervisors, reading: "Fuck Chan Peskin Preston Walton Melgar Ronen Safai Chan as a label and motherfucking crew ... And if you are down with Peskin Preston Walton Melgar Ronen Safai Chan as a crew fuck you too ... Die slow motherfuckers."
The Jan. 27, 2024, post on X from Garry Tan that he said was a joking reference to Tupac lyrics.

Sam Singer, the “master of disaster” publicist who is working with Tan, did not disclose amounts or the source of funds for Garry’s List but said it had received donations from more individuals than just Tan.

“There’s been a large amount of support from, as Garry calls them, ‘radical centrists’ to have an organization like this that is neither Democrat nor Republican, but is a pragmatic, centrist and common-sense place,” said Singer.

Singer said “all 58 counties” in California are “on Garry’s map,” and that the group would operate “from the Mexican border to the Oregon border.”

Garry’s List is the latest entry in a well-funded network of political donors that has helped push spending for local elections into the stratosphere. 

Similar operations have seen mixed success. TogetherSF, a similar nonprofit backed by venture capitalist Michael Moritz, crashed and burned after the 2024 elections, when its $9.5 million ballot measure to reform the city charter lost to a progressive counter-measure backed by about $117,000. Moritz subsequently pulled support.

Neighbors for a Better San Francisco, once the top-spending group in city politics, is still a major player ,and took in $1 million in 2025. GrowSF, another operation that once counted Tan as a board member, recently announced it would spend $2 million in the 2026 election cycle.

Tan launched his group with two co-founders — one a seasoned lobbyist, the other a rough-and-tumble local type.

Shaudi Fulp is a Sacramento lobbyist leading operations at Grow California, a separate political action committee meant to fight the proposed billionaire tax, among other issues, that is wholly funded to the tune of $10 million by crypto executives Chris Larsen and Tim Draper.

Forrest Liu is a 30-something regular on local political campaigns who got his start in politics as an intern for former Mayor Ed Lee.

In the years since, Liu acquired a reputation as an organizer focused on protecting Asian seniors from street harassment, and a reputation as a bully, for, among other things, challenging District 1 Supervisor Connie Chan to a fistfight.

Liu has been hit with at least two police reports for harassment, which led some to think that his political career was on the wane. “I think Forrest is a type who’s going to burn out really quickly in politics,” political consultant David Ho said in a 2024 profile

Garry’s List is structured as a 501(c)4 nonprofit, a tax designation that lets the group bankroll campaigns while affording donors a measure of secrecy they would not enjoy if giving directly. They are traditionally known as “dark-money” groups because they can spend on elections without revealing all their donors.

The 501(c)4 rules are complicated, but require that these groups spend less than half their funds on elections.

While they can give to candidates directly, they are more commonly used to fund “independent expenditure” committees, which can spend unlimited funds on campaigns so long as they are not found to have communicated with those campaigns directly.

The rest of a 501(c)4’s funding must go towards “social welfare” activities, which can include the “voter education” guides and events Tan has promised.

Because these often raise the public profile of a group or its causes, the portion of a 501(c)4’s spending that is “charitable” is often more significant in laying the groundwork for long-term political power than donations made during a single election.

Tan says that’s the plan. He told the Standard he aims to stand up “political infrastructure for the next 20 years.”

Follow Us

Joe was born in Sweden, where half of his family received asylum after fleeing Pinochet, and then spent his early childhood in Chile; he moved to Oakland when he was eight. He attended Stanford University for political science and worked at Mission Local as a reporter after graduating. He then spent time at YIMBY Action and as a partner for the strategic communications firm The Worker Agency. He rejoined Mission Local as an editor in 2023. You can reach him on Signal @jrivanob.99.

Join the Conversation

7 Comments

  1. Garry’s List seems more like a misinformation campaign at present! He’s currently insisting the SFUSD teacher strike is illegal (it is not). Moreover, he claims he was told this by “district sources”. If these sources exist, there’s an argument that they’re engaging in an unfair labor practice by making false claims of this nature. Of course, it’s far more likely Garry is just repeating something he made up based on his limited knowledge or heard from one of his fellow private school parents. Whatever the case, it’s incredibly bad form – absolutely what one expects from a person best known for making drunken death threats – and an excellent argument for both wealth taxes and an end to dark money in politics.

    +5
    -2
    votes. Sign in to vote
  2. “Die slow, motherfuckers” – Garry Tan

    We should treat Garry the way he treats us. He is trying to make as much money as he can. He is rich and he doesn’t want his taxes to go up. He invested in Flock and he wants our city to use our tax dollars to buy Flock cameras.

    He doesn’t care about SF. That’s a front for his corruption. Say it with me, just as Garry said it: “die slow, motherfucker!”

    +2
    0
    votes. Sign in to vote
  3. Somehow I can’t muster the energy to be more upset about Gary Tan than the politicians who decided to ignore the housing crisis, allow people to slowly kill themselves on the street, and let our school district underperform Mississippi’s. I don’t know whether his new venture is going to do any good, but if it’s a problem it’s the smallest one we’ve got.

    +1
    0
    votes. Sign in to vote
  4. Instead of fixating on the infidels and their cooties and railing against them in two minute hate, what do the Democrats plan to do to mobilize voters against this?

    0
    0
    votes. Sign in to vote
  5. Odd editorializing here. Is the San Francisco Tenants Union a dark money group, it’s also a 501(c)(4). Why not reference Aaron Peskin’s drunkenly yelling at firefighters every time he is mentioned?

    0
    0
    votes. Sign in to vote
Leave a comment
Please keep your comments short and civil. Do not leave multiple comments under multiple names on one article. We will zap comments that fail to adhere to these short and easy-to-follow rules.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *