American businessman and political strategist (born 1973)
Bradley Tusk
Bradley Tusk (2019)
Born
(1973-10-03) October 3, 1973 (age 51)
Alma mater
University of Pennsylvania[1][2] and University of Chicago Law School[3][2]
Occupations
Political strategist
Venture capitalist
Bradley Tusk (born October 3, 1973) is an American businessman, venture capitalist, political strategist, and writer.[4] He is the founder and CEO of Tusk Ventures, a venture capital fund focused on investing in early-stage startups in regulated industries.[5] His foundation Tusk Philanthropies focuses on mobile voting and anti-hunger policy campaigns in the United States.[6][7] He is also the former chairman of IG Acquisition Corp.[8] Tusk is a columnist for Fast Company,[9] and is the author of The Fixer: My Adventures Saving Startups from Death by Politics.[10]
Tusk began his career in politics as an undergraduate student working for the former Mayor of Philadelphia, Ed Rendell.[16]
New York
After graduating from college, Tusk became the spokesperson for the New York City Parks Department and helped run various divisions of the agency, most notably launching a successful campaign to change the way New Yorkers obey the leash law.[17] Tusk later returned to serve as Senior Advisor[18] to New York City Parks Commissioner Henry Stern.[3]
Tusk then joined U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer as Communications Director from 2000-2002, handling communications, strategy, and policy for the Senator, most notably in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks on New York City.[3]
In 2009, Tusk was named campaign manager for Michael Bloomberg's bid for a third term as Mayor of New York City.[19] After Bloomberg's re-election, Tusk joined his administration Michael Bloomberg,[20] as special advisor to the mayor, where he led a successful effort to re-write the New York City Charter to allow Bloomberg to serve a third term.[21] He also assisted with creating the Mayor's campaign promise index, making Bloomberg the nation's first public official to publicly report the status of each campaign promise.[3]
Tusk returned to New York City politics a decade later as an advisor and strategist for Andrew Yang's campaign in the 2021 New York City mayoral election, playing a unique role as both co-campaign managers were employees of his firm.[22][23] One critic from government group Reinvent Albany said that Tusk could be a shadow mayor for New York. Tusk responded to the allegations, and said he would not lobby a Yang administration.[23] After Yang lost by an unexpectedly wide margin, Yang's former advisers criticized Tusk Strategies for avoiding freewheeling press conferences that were a feature of his Presidential campaign.[22]
Illinois
In 2003, Governor Rod Blagojevich appointed Tusk to be Deputy Governor of Illinois. In the position, Tusk failed to file required financial disclosure reports on at least three occasions.[24] Tusk has said that he thinks Mr. Blagojevich may have hired him believing that because of his relative youth and inexperience he wouldn't notice the scams Blagojevich's administration was pulling. In 2006, Mr. Tusk resigned; three years later, Blagojevich was impeached and removed from office.[25][verification needed] Tusk testified as a witness in the criminal trial of Blagojevich, which ended in Blagojevich's conviction, recounting the occasion when Blagojevich asked him to hold up a government grant until a fundraiser was held. Tusk said at trial that he put a stop to the plans and reported the incident to the chief ethics officer.[26]
Among the accomplishments Tusk cites from his time as deputy governor are efforts to make Illinois the first state to guarantee health care for all children, the first state to offer pre-school to all 3- and 4-year olds, the first state to import prescription drugs from Europe and Canada, and the first state to convert its entire tollway system to Open Road Tolling.[27]
Private sector
After serving as Deputy Governor of Illinois, Tusk was hired as a senior vice president at Lehman Brothers, where he created the lottery monetization group and headed all of its efforts regarding U.S. based lotteries.[28] Combining his backgrounds in finance and politics, Tusk developed a successful framework to help states monetize their lotteries.[29]
In 2015, Tusk ran a public affairs campaign for Uber that included television, radio, and digital ads as well as direct mail and grassroots organizing in opposition to a cap on rideshare vehicles proposed by New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio.[30] The campaign argued that "the company was good for the city, providing jobs and transportation for less affluent residents in the outer boroughs".[31] The bill was dropped before it reached a vote.[32] After the campaign's success in New York City, Tusk moved onto other places like Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Miami, Los Angeles, Denver and Washington D.C.[33] For his representation of Uber, Tusk was compensated with equity in the company estimated to be worth $100 million.[23] The experience also provided him with exposure to the world of venture capital,[34] and Tusk Ventures was launched two weeks after the New York City victory.[35]
In 2022, Tusk opened a bookstore on the Lower East Side called P&T Knitwear.[36] In addition to being a bookstore, P&T Knitwear also has a podcast studio and an 80-seat amphitheater.[37]
Tusk Strategies also conducts issue advocacy campaigns around education reform and government; campaigns to help political candidates, non-profits and trade associations.[40]
Tusk Venture Partners
In 2015, Tusk launched Tusk Ventures Partners, a venture capital fund that invests in startups facing political and regulatory challenges or pursuing political and governmental opportunities. His work with startups began in 2011, when he worked with transportation startup Uber, which was contesting with regulation proposed by the Taxi and Limousine Commission (CE) of New York City.[41]
Tusk Venture Partners has worked with over three dozen startups including Bird, FanDuel, Lemonade, Handy, Eaze, Nexar, GlamSquad, Ripple, MainStreet, Nurx, Ro, Kodiak Robotics, pymetrics, Grove and Care/Of, solving a variety of political, regulatory and media challenges solely in return for equity in each company and for investment rights in each company's next round of financing.[42][43]
Tusk Venture Partners 1 raised its first fund in 2016 and began deploying capital into startups including Lemonade,[44] Nexar, Care/Of, Circle, Coinbase, Bird, Ro and FanDuel.[45][46]
Tusk created Tusk Philanthropies.[51] In 2017, Tusk Philanthropies launched an initiative to popularize the need for mobile voting to citizens and elected officials across the country.[52] The services Tusk has backed so far are for development of internet-based voting systems. David Dill of Verified Voting, and the National Election Defense Coalition have expressed skepticism of these efforts, based on their belief that any internet-based voting system would be vulnerable to manipulation, either by hackers or by the company owning the system.[52] Tusk Philanthropies announced a $10 million grant in 2021 for the development of internet-based voting.[53]
Tusk founded Tusk Philanthropies' Solving Hunger, which supports school meal efforts.[54]
Published works
In 2018, Tusk wrote The Fixer: My Adventures Saving Startups from Death by Politics (published by Penguin Group).[55] According to colleagues, the book "takes more credit than he deserves" for Tusk's political consulting achievements.[23]
Tusk authored a novel called Obvious in Hindsight that he called a "slightly absurdist take" on his career working with Uber. The novel was published in 2023 and is about a campaign to legalize flying cars.[36][56]
^ abcde"Bradley Tusk '99: A Big Name in the Big Apple, and Beyond". The University of Chicago. Archived from the original on July 2, 2015. Retrieved July 30, 2015. Tusk...is widely credited with spearheading the administration's most notable successes, such as broadly expanding medical insurance for children, and for effectively overseeing a massive proportion of the state's operations, including its $60 billion budget and its 57,000-person workforce.
^"Notebook: Lawrence", Newsday, May 30, 1990. Accessed December 31, 2023, via Newspapers.com. "Lawrence High School's newspaper Mental Pabulum took first place in the American Scholastic Press Association's Annual Newspaper Review The first-place certificate was presented to the student staff members including Joyce Kaufman, Bradley Tusk, David Mantell, Jennifer Rabin, Josh Steinerman, editor-in-chief Mat Linett and faculty adviser Frank Scoblete."
^Shattuck, Kathryn (1996-02-11). "F.Y.I."The New York Times. ISSN0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-06-20.
^Martin, Douglas. "Leash Patrol Touts Victory In City Parks; Next, Pit Bulls". The New York Times. Retrieved August 2, 2015. The tougher approach to the leash law was the brainchild of Mr. Tusk, the agency's former spokesman, who had left his job for two years to attend the University of Chicago Law School.