Reclusive billionaire Timothy Mellon revealed as secret donor who funded US troops

4 hours ago 3
By Tyler Pager

October 26, 2025 — 8.00pm

Washington: Timothy Mellon, a reclusive billionaire and a major financial backer of US President Donald Trump, is the anonymous private donor who gave $US130 million ($199.7 million) to the US government to help pay troops during the shutdown, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Trump announced the donation last week, but he declined to identify the person who provided the funds, only calling him a “patriot” and a friend. But the two people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the donation was private, identified him as Mellon.

Portrait of businessman Timothy Mellon in 1981. He was born in 1942.

Portrait of businessman Timothy Mellon in 1981. He was born in 1942.Credit: Alamy Stock Photo

Shortly after departing Washington on Friday (Saturday AEDT), Trump again declined to identify Mellon while talking to reporters aboard Air Force One. He said only that the individual was “a great American citizen” and a “substantial man”.

“He doesn’t want publicity,” Trump said as he headed to Malaysia for the ASEAN summit. “He’d prefer that his name not be mentioned, which is pretty unusual in the world I come from, and in the world of politics, you want your name mentioned.”

The White House declined to comment. Multiple attempts to reach Mellon and representatives for him were unsuccessful.

It remains unclear how far the donation will go towards covering the salaries of the more than 1.3 million troops who make up the active duty military. The Congressional Budget Office says the Trump administration’s 2025 budget requested about $US600 billion in total military compensation. A $US130 million donation would equal about $US100 a service member.

Mellon, a wealthy banking heir and railroad magnate, is a longtime backer of Trump. He gave tens of millions of dollars to groups supporting the president’s election campaign. Last year, he made a $US50 million donation to a super political action committee supporting Trump, one of the largest single contributions ever disclosed.

A grandson of former Treasury secretary Andrew W. Mellon, Mellon was not a prominent Republican donor until Trump was elected. But in recent years, he has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into supporting Trump and the Republican Party.

Donald Trump waves as he boards Air Force One for his trip to Asia.

Donald Trump waves as he boards Air Force One for his trip to Asia.Credit: AP

Mellon, who lives primarily in Wyoming, keeps a low profile despite his prolific political spending. He is also a significant supporter of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr, who also ran for president last year. Mellon donated millions to Kennedy’s presidential campaign and has also given money to his anti-vaccine group, Children’s Health Defence.

The Pentagon said it accepted the donation under the “general gift acceptance authority”.

“The donation was made on the condition that it be used to offset the cost of service members’ salaries and benefits,” Pentagon chief spokesman Sean Parnell said in a statement.

The donation appears to be a potential violation of the Antideficiency Act, which prohibits federal agencies from spending money in excess of congressional appropriations or from accepting voluntary services.

More than three weeks into the government shutdown, the Trump administration has taken a series of unorthodox steps to redirect funds to pay certain government workers.

Trump has vowed to pay military members, immigration agents and law enforcement officials even though politicians have not approved the money for their wages. Workers in those categories are considered essential and must continue working during the shutdown, although they are entitled to back pay under a 2019 law.

As part of that promise, Trump signed an executive order this month directing the Pentagon to use unspent research and development funds to cover troops’ salaries. But congressional leaders have said moving funds around is only a temporary fix.

Thousands of federal workers missed their first pay cheques this past week. About 670,000 workers have been furloughed, according to a tally by the Bipartisan Policy Centre, a Washington-based think tank. An additional 730,000 or so are working without pay.

US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr and President Donald Trump in the White House earlier this month.

US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr and President Donald Trump in the White House earlier this month.Credit: Bloomberg

In an autobiography that he self-published in 2015, Mellon describes himself as a former liberal who moved to Wyoming from Connecticut for lower taxes and to have fewer neighbours.

His book also contains several incendiary passages about race. He wrote that black people were “even more belligerent” after social programs were expanded in the 1960s and 1970s, and that social safety net programs amounted to “slavery redux”.

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Mellon wrote another book in the northern summer of 2024 about his work turning around Pan Am Systems, a collection of companies that includes rail, aviation and marketing firms. The book was put out by Skyhorse Publishing, which also published a recent memoir by first lady Melania Trump. Skyhorse Publishing president Tony Lyons cofounded a super PAC, American Values 2024, that backed Kennedy’s presidential bid.

In 2020, during a rare and brief interview with The New York Times, Mellon declined to answer questions about his political giving.

“I’ll contribute to him or Biden or whoever I want to,” he said, referring to Trump and his rival, Joe Biden. “I don’t have to say why.”

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