policy, international aid, scientific advancements and global catastrophe response. Tuna explained her philanthropic interests in a 2014 Washington Post profile, saying that she wanted to invest in U.S. Moskovitz’s wealth is estimated to be approximately $10.5 billion, and Tuna has charted the couple’s giving as president of Good Ventures. The couple are the youngest to agree to the Giving Pledge, an initiative by Bill Gates and Warren Buffett that asks billionaires to give away most of their wealth to charity. Moskovitz and Tuna have been supporting philanthropic causes with a serious focus on efficiency through Good Ventures, but this is their first presidential campaign donation. “That said, we believe in trying to do as much good as we can, which in this case means using the tools available to us (as they are also available to the opposition).” “This decision was not easy, particularly because we have reservations about anyone using large amounts of money to influence elections,” Moskovitz added. “If Donald Trump wins, the country will fall backward, and become more isolated from the global community,” he wrote. Moskovitz said in his post announcing the donation that he was motivated in part by a desire to defeat Trump in the November election.
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The League of Conservation Voters Victory Fund and For Our Future PAC, two organizations focused on environmental and labor issues, will each receive $5 million, while the other $10 million will go to the DSCC, the DCCC, Political Action, Color Of Change PAC, as well as “several nonpartisan voter registration and GOTV efforts.” In a post titled “Compelled to Act”, Moskovitz explains the donation, saying, “If Secretary Clinton wins the election, America will advance much further toward the world we hope to see,” which is one that of “increased tolerance, diversity and interdependence in the name of mutual prosperity.” Several funds, PACs, and Democratic organizations supporting Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign have received a combined donation of $20 million. The $20 million infusion comes from Asana and Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz and his wife Cari Tuna. It’s no secret that Hillary Clinton is well ahead of her presidential opponent Donald Trump when it comes to fundraising from Silicon Valley - but the second-largest donation of the election season just pushed her financial lead even further.