Skip to main content

The Five Most Influential American Men Who Never Held High Office

The most influential, prominent person in the United States of America (or, in other words, the most important) is, of course, the President. The second most important person is arguably the Chairman/Chairwoman of the Federal Reserve. Or maybe the Speaker of the House, depending on how he or she wields the reigns of that office. The Chairperson of the Joint Chiefs of Staff? That’s an important American, too. The list goes on, and by in large it does so in a logical manner.

Related: Mr. President Goes to War

Recommended Videos

Where things get a bit less clear cut is in weighing the importance (measured in influence, legacy, prestige, and so forth) of people who never held an office. After all, even a middling president (looking at YOU, Fillmore) is still the most prominent, powerful American during his (or her…) tenure in office. It takes genuine character, serious accomplishments, or cold hard cash to influence America if one’s whole life is lived outside of elected or appointed office.

Now without further adieu (and with explicit acknowledgement that many women have contributed great things, but this is a list about men because of… reasons), here are five highly influential Americans who never held high (or in most cases any) office.

ROCKEFELLERJOHN D. ROCKEFELLER

When you adjust for inflation, Rockefeller was the richest American of all time. At the time of his death in the 1930s, the man was worth approximately $1.4 billion dollars. That would equate to a net worth of more than $23 billion today. At its peak, Rockefeller’s wealth represented about 1.5% of the entire economy of the goddamn country. He earned all that cash thanks to his controlling stake in the company he co-founded, Standard Oil, which would become the largest company in the country and the first super monopoly; at one point, Standard Oil controlled almost total control of the American oil and gas industry, owning everything from production facilities to refineries to distribution networks to sales locations. In the later years of his life, Rockefeller retired from Standard Oil (which was eventually broken up by the government), Rockefeller became a leading philanthropist, largely defining the way the modern super rich person uses his or her wealth to support chosen causes, found institutions, and generally spread influence.

MLKMARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.

Little needs to be said here about what the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King, Jr. did to advance the cause of civil rights for people of color; that story is well enough known indeed. What bears remembering is how much this man’s work — his dedication to nonviolent protest and his passion for unity and justice — spread beyond that lone cause, influencing all subsequent movements that have pushed to expand civil freedoms and dignity for so many. We still see echoes of his movement as people strive to gain full acceptance for transgendered people today. And by the way, just in case you didn’t know this, Martin Luther King, Jr. wasn’t even 40 years old at the time of his death.

KOCHSTHE KOCH BROTHERS

Charles and David Koch are being treated as one entity for our purposes, for I’m not really interested in them as individuals, but rather as peddlers of influence, and in that regard they are more of an entity. The brothers each own 42% of Koch Industries, the company founded by their father in 1940. That company employs more than 100,000 people and generates annual revenues of more than $115 billion, so the Koch Boys are rather rich as hell. The Kochs use their personal wealth to support and advance a host of causes usually aligned with conservative politics, including financial and corporate deregulation, eliminating greenhouse has emissions limits and other climate change-related controls, and the support of right-wing politicians. These days, few national elections go by without infusions of cash coming from the Kochs; tracing their fingerprints, however, can be a bit hard to do. Indeed, they’re rather masterful plutocrats.

TRUMPDONALD TRUMP

Donald John Trump is a 69 year old caucasian American male (70 this June) who grew up in Queens, New York, and was thrown out of school at the age of 13. He attended a military reform school from 8th grade through high school, then secured multiple deferments from military service in the Vietnam War while attending college and working for his father’s company in the mid 1960s. He continued working for his family company, using money given to him by his dad, into the 1970s, a decade during which he was charged by the Justice Department of violating numerous violations of the Fair Housing Act. And blah, blah, blah. The point is that somehow, someway, this goddamned spoiled loudmouth has managed to parlay his fortune and his larger-than-life, total asshole personality into a caricature of a person people are actually considering as an American president. Jesus Christ. Anyway, rest assured the country will come to its collective senses and he will always have a place on this list of people who never held high office.

BEN FRANKLINBENJAMIN FRANKLIN

Where to start with this OG? First, technically Franklin did hold several offices, including Postmaster General, Foreign Minister, and a post that would later be tantamount to a governorship. But what he opted not to do was take part in the electoral politics of the early American republic, preferring to stay just a step outside the spotlight as he helped steer the helm of our fledgling nation. Franklin helped write the Declaration of Independence, helped secure the support of France during the subsequent American Revolution, helped pioneer several branches of science, and somehow found time to chase tail well into his 80s. He established fire departments, libraries, studied ocean currents, and wrote music. He wrote avidly, he played chess with the best of them, and man… we haven’t even scratched the surface.

Steven John
Steven John is a writer and journalist living just outside New York City, by way of 12 years in Los Angeles, by way of…
Netflix is planning to continue investing in gaming, including new co-op games
The company has had games on its service since 2023.
Netflix logo on TV with red backlighting

Even as Netflix is raising prices on consumers, the company has also announced that it will be introducing couch co-op and party games for subscribers. The company has offered cloud gaming as a "beta" to a subset of its subscribers since 2023, and the move into co-op games suggests that the streamer will continue to invest in this area.

Co-CEO Greg Peters made the announcement as part of the company's Q4 earnings report, but he didn't detail what games might be available through this new platform. “We think of this as a successor to family board game night or an evolution of what the game show on TV used to be," he explained.

Read more
The best adventure movies: The films that keep you on the edge of your seat
These adventure movies will take you to new parts of the world
Harrison Ford in Raiders of the Lost Ark

The idea of an adventure movie is pretty specialized. These are movies that exist broadly within the world of action cinema, but they are just one small corner of that world. These movies typically involve exotic locations, traps, and tunnels. Sometimes, they're set in the jungle or the desert, and sometimes they're set on the high seas.

Personally, I'm partial to sea-faring movies, maybe in part because I have no desire to live my life on the water. In my own life, these movies have often represented a chance to understand the world, and to appreciate its vastness, splendor, and danger.

Read more
8 best dystopian shows if you’re ready for gripping, unsettling storytelling
Zombies and slavery are two of the most dystopian subjects on TV right now
Andrew Lincoln as Rick Grimes in The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live.

Dystopian fiction dives into our deepest fears and makes us reimagine society at its worst. Although many people are already living a nightmare around the world, dystopias in fiction reinforce the injustices of human life and put a spin or analysis on something tangible. Films and novels were arguably the most popular methods of dystopian storytelling throughout most of the 20th century, but the rise of more complex TV writing and acting has allowed it to catapult to the top of the genre's food chain.

The versatility of dystopian TV means that it branches out across many different categories. Science fiction, fantasy, and horror are all great options for writers to paint a picture of a world during the end times. These are the best dystopian shows to watch if you want a thoughtful analysis of what happens when human society becomes warped beyond repair.

Read more