Tony Blair’s billionaire ally shifting the world’s media to the Right

Tony Blair’s billionaire ally shifting the world’s media to the Right

Tony Blair’s billionaire ally shifting the world’s media to the Right

larry ellison
larry ellison

Billionaire Larry Ellison may be one of the world’s richest men, but for decades he was overshadowed by tech luminaries like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk.

Not any more.

The 81-year-old tycoon, whose net worth briefly overtook Musk’s earlier this month, has become a pivotal force in the global media and tech landscape, capturing the zeitgeist of Donald Trump’s tech-dominated administration.

While Oracle, his software giant, may not be a household name, hopes of an AI boom have propelled the company into territory reserved for the likes of the “magnificent seven” – Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Tesla and Nvidia. Shares rose an astonishing 43pc last week after a positive trading update.

Now Ellison – a long-time ally of former prime minister Sir Tony Blair – is using his billions to reshape the media landscape to his own whims, teeing up a shift to the Right by America’s TV, film and tech industries.

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Most recently, the tycoon has also been bankrolling his son David’s media venture Skydance. It recently clinched an $8bn (£6bn) takeover of Channel 5 owner Paramount and has already set its sights on Hollywood behemoth Warner Bros Discovery.

Meanwhile, Ellison is a linchpin in the conglomerate which could buy up TikTok’s US assets after Trump ordered a sale of the Chinese social media giant.

Recently asked who should buy TikTok, Trump responded: “I’d like Larry to buy it.”

This flurry of dealmaking means Ellison is poised to become one of the most powerful media moguls in the world. And as he cosies up to Trump, he looks poised to play a key role in a fundamental shake-up of US media.

Ellison, who founded Oracle in California in 1977, belongs to a different breed of tech entrepreneurs from the outspoken Silicon Valley tycoons of today.

Despite making billions from his software company, in which he holds a 41pc stake, the businessman has largely kept himself out of the public eye, rarely giving interviews and keeping his social media presence to a minimum.

Instead, Ellison has had fun. From his successful yachting escapades in the Americas Cup to buying up Hawaii’s sixth-largest island, he has demonstrated extravagant tastes.

He has spent an estimated $875m on the Oracle racing team, which has won the Americas Cup twice, and around $200m on a California estate modelled on a 16th-century imperial Japanese palace.

Larry Ellison lifts the America's Cup with members of the Oracle Team USA in 2013
Ellison lifts the America’s Cup with members of the Oracle Team USA in 2013 – Robert Galbraith/Reuters

Ellison invested $1bn in Musk’s 2022 takeover of Twitter because, he said, it “would be lots of fun”. He has been married six times, with his latest wife Jolin Zhu almost 50 years his junior.