Seattle's Socialist Mayor BEGS Amazon To Stay After 30,000 Job Cuts - Bezos Was RIGHT

Seattle's fiscal unraveling isn't a story about remote work or a pandemic hangover — it's a story about a city that taxed its most consequential tenant out of its zip code. In this video, we trace how a series of escalating payroll levies, beginning with the 2018 head tax and culminating in the 2020 JumpStart Payroll Expense Tax, prompted Amazon to quietly relocate over 14,000 employees across Lake Washington to Bellevue — a move that didn't cross a state line, didn't generate a headline, and didn't require a single press conference. What it did do was drain the revenue base Seattle had built its entire budget expansion on. Downtown office vacancy has now reached 35.6%, the highest in recorded city history and second-worst nationally, while Bellevue — fifteen minutes away — sits at 22% and commands twice the asking rent. We examine how a tax designed to capture wealth from the city's largest employer instead redistributed that employer to the next city over, and what the resulting budget math looks like when 70% of a major revenue stream depends on ten companies staying put. JumpStart fell $47 million short of its forecast in 2024 alone. Seattle's general fund has grown 79% in a decade to $2 billion, and the city is now raiding its own housing fund to cover basic services while projecting a $300 million deficit by 2029 — by its own legislative staff's estimates. What Seattle is living through isn't unique: San Francisco sits at 33% office vacancy, Portland at 31%, and Washington state's new income tax on high earners may already be accelerating the next round of departures. The pattern is the policy. Turn on notifications to stay updated! 🔔🔔🔔