Jonathan Tivadar Soros (born September 10, 1970) is the founder and chief executive officer of JS Capital Management LLC, a private investment firm.
Prior to that, Soros worked at Soros Fund Management in daily operations and was co-deputy chairman of the organization.
He has been a prominent donor to Democratic and progressive political causes.
Soros started the Friends of Democracy PAC, now merged into Every Voice, to push for campaign finance reform and the abolition of the electoral college.
1981
Soros's parents are Annaliese Witschak and business magnate George Soros, who divorced in 1981.
He is the brother of Andrea and Robert Soros and half-brother of Gregory and Alexander, from his father's second marriage to Susan Weber.
1992
He received a Bachelor of Arts from Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut in 1992.
He then received a Juris Doctor from Harvard Law School and a Master of Public Policy from Harvard Kennedy School.
Soros worked for a federal judge as a law clerk before joining Soros Fund Management.
2002
Soros worked at Soros Fund Management beginning in 2002 and in 2004, he and his brother, Robert, became co-deputy chairmen of the organization that managed $12.8 billion in funds at that time.
Their father stepped down at that time, but remained as chairman.
2011
He focused on operations and was the organization's chief investment officer until he stepped down in 2011.
His father said that Jonathan was "the principal architect of our transition to a healthy and stable investment operation" out of a turbulent financial period.
However, that year, the organization had incurred "significant losses" and had converted to a family office—managing the funds of George, his foundation, and Soros family members— and no longer operating as a hedge fund.
In the process, its investors received $1 billion from the fund.
Reuters states that the move was made to avoid a deadline to register at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as an investment manager.
Jonathan remained on the board of his father's foundation.
Soros is the founder and chief executive officer of JS Capital Management LLC, a private investment firm, located in midtown Manhattan near Central Park.
2012
In July 2012, Soros started and funded Friends of Democracy PAC (now merged into Every Voice), a hybrid political action committee and super PAC designed to push for campaign finance reform that would mandate a public financing system for all federal elections.
Soros's organization was described as an "anti-super PAC super PAC" by The Washington Post.
Founded with Ilyse Hogue, formerly with Media Matters for America and MoveOn.org, and David Donnelly, executive director of the Public Campaign Action Fund, the goal of the organization is to elect candidates that support campaign reform, including public matching funds for elections.
Its strategy is to identify 10 to 15 districts where incumbent senators or congressmen have not supported "citizen-led" elections, and use multiple forms of media—like television ads, direct mail, phone calls, internet ads—to communicate the lawmaker's position on campaign funding.
For instance, Soros, the organization's largest contributor, helped fund the 2012 election of Cecilia Tkaczyk, who supports changes to funding for state elections by implementing a system of public financing.
She won by a small margin, in a district that historically elected Republicans.
He supports the New York Leadership for Accountable Government, formed about 2012.
2014
By 2014, he gave $2 million over a few years to support initiatives and candidates, and a total of $3.7 million was spent by Soros for Democratic candidates by October of that year.
Seven of the eight candidates that the PAC chose to back were elected in 2014.
He is a member of Democracy Alliance, an organization that funds Democratic campaigns.
The American Prospect said of him, "Jonathan Soros has emerged in recent years as a savvy donor and operative, much more hands-on than his father, George, the billionaire investor and Democratic donor."
2015
The second quarter 2015 filings showed that the U.S. assets in its portfolio were valued at $500 million, up from $394.76 million the previous quarter.
In 2015, Bloomberg Politics identified him as one of the hedge fund titans.
He advocates for the removal of the electoral college, which he says is undemocratic and unconstitutional.
This is the position of the Every Voice political advocacy group and the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact that advocates for electoral votes to be given to each state based upon certified results of the popular vote.
2016
He backed two state legislative initiatives in 2016 to reform campaign financing, one in the state of Washington and the other in South Dakota.
Washington Initiative 1464 would have provided $150 for each voter to contribute towards a candidate of their choice and limited contributions by government contractors and lobbyists.
It did not pass.
However, South Dakota's Government Accountability and Anti-Corruption Act was successful.
Soros has worked with MoveOn.org and other political advocacy groups.
He is a senior fellow at the Roosevelt Institute and a member of the board of directors of the New America Foundation and the Open Society Foundations.