Democracy Dies in Darkness

Timothy Mellon, top donor to Trump super PAC, used racial stereotypes to describe African Americans in his autobiography

June 18, 2020 at 12:34 p.m. EDT
President Trump arrives for a roundtable discussion at Gateway Church Dallas Campus in Dallas on June 11. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

The top donor supporting President Trump’s reelection and GOP congressional lawmakers is a ­reclusive heir to the wealthy Mellon family fortune who used ­racial stereotypes to describe ­African Americans in a self-
published autobiography.

Timothy Mellon, the 77-year-old founder of a rail and freight company, who poured $30 million into three GOP super PACs in five months, wrote that black people were “even more belligerent” after the expansion of social programs in the 1960s and 1970s and that Americans who rely on government assistance were “slaves of a new Master, Uncle Sam.”