Jones criticizes Mike Thompson for taking PAC money, but is he being hypocritical?
By Roberta Millstein

Among the small deluge of flyers Davisites have received promoting Eric Jones’s candidacy for Congressional District 4, some may have noticed that one was different from the others: It indicated that it was paid for by a group called “New Leadership Now.” Who is New Leadership Now, and what sort of connection does it have to Eric Jones, if any? This article aims to shed a bit of light on these questions. It is a follow-up to my earlier article discussing the direct campaign contributions from Jones’s former venture capitalist co-workers and other individuals from the high tech industry.
New Leadership Now is registered with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) as a Super PAC. What is a Super PAC? Wikipedia has a helpful definition:
Independent expenditure-only political action committees, commonly known as super PACs, are a type of political action committees (PACs) in the United States. Unlike traditional PACs, super PACs are legally allowed to fundraise unlimited amounts of money from individuals or organizations for the purpose of campaign advertising; however, they are not permitted to either coordinate with or contribute directly to candidate campaigns or political parties. However, in practice, restrictions on such coordination are considered flimsy and poorly enforced.[1]
The unlimited expenditures coupled with not really knowing if the committees are actually coordinating with candidates make Super PACs controversial. Eric Jones has touted his campaign as “Powered by People, Not Special Interests: Not a Dime from Corporate PACs”[2] What I will describe below casts some serious doubt on that slogan, however.
Let’s start with the donations to New Leadership Now. The screenshots below show that as of 3/31/2026, there has been $1.797 million contributed to the SuperPAC. Of that total, $297,000 comes from two named trusts: the Robertson 2012 Trust and the Gillespie Family Trust and the rest, $1.5 million, comes from a single individual: Elisa Stad.



I am not sure who is behind the Robertson 2012 Trust, but it seems likely that the Gillespie Family Trust is related to two individual donors to Eric Jones’s campaign, Katherine Gillespie and Daniel Gillespie, each of whom donated the maximum $7000/individual back on August 31, 2025, prior to Jones declaring his campaign in early September 2025.[3] Daniel Gillespie lists his employer as Dragoneer Investment Group, the same company that Eric Jones worked for as a venture capitalist for the previous 12+ years (per Jones’s LinkedIn page). Katherine Gillespie is listed as “not employed”. Both list San Francisco as their address. (In my earlier article, I mentioned the large number of out-of-district donations from employees of the venture capital firm, Dragoneer Investment Group). Assuming these are the same Gillespies, that would be a total of $239,000 in donations from the Gillespie family.

As for Elisa Stad, in addition to her $1.5 million donation to the Super PAC, she and Marc Stad, another employee of Dragoneer Investment Group, also donated the individual maximums, both on September 8, 2025. Both also list out-of-district addresses (Santa Barbara and San Francisco, respectively). The couple was featured in a Yahoo! Finance article in November 2020 as having spent $41 million on two Montecito mansions; the article states:
Though he’s deliberately kept a low public profile, in recent years Stad has attracted increased media attention for his reputation as one of the tech industry’s most successful investors. His Dragoneer Investment Group collection of hedge funds, headquartered in the Bay Area, owns a big chunk of Uber and funded pre-IPO debt for Spotify, among lucrative investments in a number of other high-growth tech companies. Today, Dragoneer has more than $8.6 billion in discretionary assets under management, according to WhaleWisdom. [4]

I mention this because of the light it sheds on Dragoneer Investment Group — noting in particular its connections to the high-tech firms Uber and Spotify — and the extremely large amounts of money involved, again with the goal of better understanding the New Leadership Now Super PAC that funded the flyer for Eric Jones. It’s hard to deny that there is a close connection between the Dragoneer Investment Group where Eric Jones used to work and the Super PAC that is now supporting his candidacy.
So, let’s take stock.
The first question I have is the question that always arises with Super PACs, namely, are they really independent from the candidate who they are supporting? I think that this question arises even more strongly here than usual because the New Leadership Now Super PAC is funded by Jones’s former Dragoneer Investment Group co-workers, some of whom began funding even before his campaign was announced, and who also donated as individuals.
Second, as I read the available FEC filings for the New Leadership Now Super PAC, they only show expenditures for promoting Eric Jones’s candidacy, not for “new leadership” overall. (Note that the Super PAC was registered on March 31, 2025, not long before Eric Jones announced his campaign). In addition to an expenditure for the flyer pictured at the top of this article, FEC filings show more expenditures as of just yesterday: at least one more direct mailing in support of Eric Jones and digital ads opposing Mike Thompson.

Third, in light of the close connection between this Super PAC and Jones, his pledge not to “take a dime from special interests, PACs, or lobbyists” rings pretty hollow. It seems like a distinction without a difference: He won’t take money from special interests, PACs, or lobbyists but he will take money from billionaire venture capitalists, including some of the same billionaire venture capitalists who created a Super PAC that so far has shelled out well over $100,000 in support of his run for Congress, as indicated by the screenshot above. This goes beyond my previous article which just showed that he was taking money from his venture capitalist pals. This is a lot more money and also uses the very corporate PAC mechanism that he claims to eschew.

I mean, I guess he could say “I didn’t know about any of this!” or “I haven’t been involved at all,” and maybe that is true, but I leave it to the reader to decide if they think that is plausible. And would he — will he — condemn this Super PAC?
If not, then we have to ask whether Eric Jones will truly be representing the interests of District 4 or whether he will instead be promoting the agendas of out-of-district venture capitalists and high-tech companies? I don’t claim to have answered that question, but I know I don’t feel confident that Eric Jones will represent the interests of our district.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_PAC
[2] https://www.ericjones.us/blog-1/eric-jones-campaign-tops-25-million-raised-with-nearly-2-million-cash-on-hand-powered-by-people-not-special-interestsnot-a-dime-from-corporate-pacs
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Jones_(Political_Candidate)
[4] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/investor-marc-stad-spends-41-005941233.html



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