Rebekah Mercer

Director

Birthday December 6, 1973

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Yorktown Heights, New York, U.S.

Age 50 years old

Nationality United States

#49607 Most Popular

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Rebekah Mercer is a Republican political donor, and director of the Mercer Family Foundation.

Mercer began overseeing day-to-day operations of political projects for the Mercer family when the Mercers became involved in conservative causes.

1999

Mercer enrolled at Cornell University and later transferred to Stanford University, where she studied biology and mathematics and earned a master's degree in 1999 in management science and engineering.

She worked as a Wall Street trader at Renaissance Technologies, the hedge fund her father helped lead.

2006

In 2006, Mercer and her sisters purchased Ruby et Violette, a New York City company that sells cookies and brownies online.

2010

In 2010, she bought six adjoining apartment units in Donald Trump's 41-story Heritage at Trump Place.

2012

Mercer first became engaged in conservative politics in 2012 after Mitt Romney's defeat in the 2012 presidential election.

She spoke to a group of wealthy conservative donors at the University Club of New York about what the Republican Party had done wrong in canvassing and technology operations during the election.

Mercer supported Mitt Romney in the 2012 Republican Party presidential primaries.

2013

The following year, in 2013, Mercer helped start Reclaim New York with Steve Bannon.

The organization trains citizens to watch their government closely, and uses freedom of information laws to force the New York government to disclose public spending.

2014

In 2014, Mercer joined The Heritage Foundation's board of trustees.

2016

In September 2016, Politico called her "the most powerful woman in GOP politics."

She has been more aligned with the anti-establishment part of the Republican Party than most big Republican donors.

Newsmax Media owner Christopher Ruddy called her the "First Lady of the Alt-Right".

In 2016, Mercer supported Ted Cruz in the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries.

She led Keep the Promise I, a Super PAC, which was the largest source of financial support in support of Cruz's campaign.

After Donald Trump secured the Republican nomination, however, she and her father switched their support to Trump.

Mercer supported Jeff Sessions for U.S. Attorney General and against Mitt Romney, who Trump was considering for U.S. Secretary of State.

Mercer and her father contributed $25 million during the 2016 presidential election.

In June 2016, Mercer created the Defeat Crooked Hillary PAC, and ran the organization's daily operations.

The PAC was incorporated with the Federal Election Commission as Make America Number 1 and supported Trump in the general election, including making anti-Hillary Clinton advertisements.

During the 2016 presidential election, Mercer proposed creating a searchable database for Hillary Clinton's e-mails in the public domain and then forwarded this suggestion to several people, including Alexander Nix the CEO of Cambridge Analytica, who e-mailed the request to Julian Assange.

Assange denied Nix's request.

Mercer worked with Steve Bannon to create the film Clinton Cash.

She has consulted extensively with former Democratic strategist and pollster Patrick Caddell on campaigns.

The Mercers stood behind Trump following release of the Access Hollywood tape was leaked in late 2016, dismissing Trump's claim of grabbing women's genitals against their will as "locker room braggadocio."

Mercer directs the Mercer Family Foundation and served on the executive committee of Trump's presidential transition team.

People close to the transition said she opposed Corey Lewandowski as RNC chair, noting that Lewandowski had reportedly resisted paying for services from Cambridge Analytica, a data firm funded by the Mercers early in the campaign, though a close associate of Mercer's denied the stories.

Lewandowski was not, however, supported for the RNC position and did not obtain it.

Paul Manafort, Kellyanne Conway's predecessor as campaign director, who was also said to be critical of Cambridge Analytica, had worked for Ted Cruz and was financially backed by the Mercers.

Conway reportedly said that, after Trump's inauguration, the expectation was that Mercer would likely lead an outside group, funded by her father, aimed at bolstering Trump's agenda.

It was assumed that Cambridge Analytica would also assist the group's efforts.

The Mercers first introduced Steve Bannon to Donald Trump.

Mercer helped create the film Clinton Cash with Bannon, a top political adviser to Trump at the time.

She has been one of Bannon's main financial contributors.

2017

Her father, billionaire Robert Mercer, said in November 2017 that he had sold his stake in the news site Breitbart to his daughters.

2018

In August 2018, she funded and co-founded the social networking service Parler.

Mercer is the second of three daughters of Diana Lynne (Dean) and billionaire hedge fund manager Robert Mercer.

She was raised in Yorktown Heights, New York, a suburb of New York City.