Leon Cooperman Won’t Attend Elizabeth Warren’s Tax Hearing, But Will Watch It

Leon Cooperman declined an invitation from Senator Elizabeth Warren to testify at a tax hearing.

The billionaire investor called the invitation “self-serving and disingenuous” and declared that the hearing will be “conducted in a showboating atmosphere not conducive to serious debate.”

“I am not interested in being pilloried by her while she uses me as a foil to promote her far-left manifesto,” he said in a statement.

It’s the latest shot in a long-brewing rivalry between Cooperman and Warren, who chairs the Senate Finance Committee’s Subcommittee on Fiscal Responsibility and Economic Growth and is one of Wall Street’s most vocal critics in Congress.

Warren soon responded via social media that “we should have a public discussion on our rigged tax system. I’ll still use the hearing to do that.”

The April 27 hearing will focus on “creating opportunity through a fairer tax system,” as authorities around the world consider new proposals for levies on millionaires and billionaires. In the U.S., the top 1% saw their net worth rise by about $4 trillion in 2020, capturing more than a third of all new wealth, according to data from the Federal Reserve. Meanwhile, the net worth of the poorest half of American households rose $471 billion, just 4% of last year’s overall gain.