Bernard Marcus


Bernard "Bernie" Marcus is an American billionaire businessman. He co-founded The Home Depot and was the company's first CEO, and chairman until retiring in 2002.

Early life and education

Bernard Marcus was born to Russian Jewish immigrant parents in Newark, New Jersey. He grew up in a tenement and graduated from South Side High School in 1947. Marcus wanted to become a doctor but could not afford the tuition, so he worked for his father as a cabinet maker. He studied at Rutgers University for a pharmacy degree. While there he joined the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity.

Career

Marcus worked at a drugstore as a pharmacist but became more interested in the retailing side of the business. He worked at a cosmetics company and various other retail jobs, eventually reaching a position as CEO of Handy Dan Improvement Centers, a Los Angeles-based chain of home improvement stores. In 1978 both he and future Home Depot co-founder Arthur Blank were fired during a corporate power struggle at Handy Dan. In 1979 they co-founded the home-improvement retailer The Home Depot, with the help of merchandising expert Pat Farrah and New York investment banker Ken Langone who assembled a group of investors.
The store revolutionized the home improvement business with its warehouse concept. Blank, Marcus, and Langone became billionaires. Marcus served as the company's first CEO for 19 years and also served as chairman of the board until his retirement in 2002. Marcus was inducted into the Junior Achievement U.S. Business Hall of Fame in 2006.
Marcus, along with other business leaders, has opposed the Employee Free Choice Act, a controversial proposal they see as giving unfair advantage to labor unions. It would eliminate employees right to protect themselves with secret ballots when voting whether or not to even join a union. It would also allow the government to step in and levy fines and injunctions when employees claim they are being punished for union activity on the job without due process for the employers.
In January 2014, Marcus founded the Job Creators Network, a conservative advocacy group, with $500,000 in seed funding. The Network is known for recruiting small-business entrepreneurs and executives as spokespeople for free markets and connecting them to publicity opportunities, notably in advertisements, op-eds, and television appearances. In February 2019, the Job Creators Network paid for a billboard advertisement in Times Square which criticized the Democrat and union opposition to Amazon's offer to build its new headquarters in New York City. Led by New York Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Amazon withdrew its bid for the planned site in Lower Manhattan. Ocasio-Cortex had claimed that the $3 billion in tax incentives was an actual transfer of cash to Amazon from New York taxpayers. Mayor de Blasio went on Meet the Press to explain it was Amazon's $3 billion, not taxpayer funds, that would be used in building the headquarters and new warehouse. Had the bid succeeded, New York City would have gained an estimated $27 billion in tax revenue from Amazon in the first year, and an estimated $30 billion the following year.
In 2015, Marcus donated $1.5 million to Super PACs supporting Jeb Bush and Scott Walker. On June 1, 2016, when it became clear Donald Trump had won the Republican nomination, Marcus said, "I now stand in support of Donald Trump because the fate of this nation depends upon sending him, and not Hillary Clinton, to the White House."
When Bernie Marcus announced in 2019 that he would financially support the Donald Trump 2020 presidential campaign, it triggered calls for a boycott of Home Depot, even though Marcus was no longer with the company. In a June 2019 interview, Marcus said most of his wealth is in Home Depot stock.

Philanthropy

Marcus co-founded the Israel Democracy Institute in 1991, contributing $5 million for the construction of the institute's building in Jerusalem's Talbiya neighborhood and investing hundreds of millions of shekels in its ongoing operation over the years. He heavily contributed to the launch of the Georgia Aquarium, which opened in downtown Atlanta, Georgia, in 2005. Based mostly on the US$250M million donation for the Aquarium, Marcus and his wife, Billi, were listed among the top charitable donors in the country by The Chronicle of Philanthropy in 2005. Marcus also funded and founded The Marcus Institute, a center for the provision of services for children and adolescents with developmental disabilities. In May 2005, Marcus was awarded the Others Award by the Salvation Army, its highest honor. Marcus donated $25 million to Autism Speaks to spearhead its efforts to raise money for research on the causes and cure for autism. He is an active member of the board of directors. Bernie and Billi Marcus are signatories of The Giving Pledge, a commitment to give away the majority of their wealth to philanthropic causes.
Marcus is chairman of the Marcus Foundation, whose focuses include children, medical research, free enterprise, military veterans, Israeli causes and the community. Marcus is on the Board of Directors and an active volunteer for the Shepherd Center. His main focus is in providing care for war veterans with traumatic brain injuries. He was named a Georgia Trustee in 2009. The award is given by the Georgia Historical Society, in conjunction with the Governor of Georgia, to individuals whose accomplishments and community service reflect the ideals of the founding body of Trustees, which governed the Georgia colony from 1732 to 1752. In 2012, Marcus was awarded the William E. Simon Prize for Philanthropic Leadership.
In 2016, Marcus and his wife Billi donated $25 million to the construction of the $133 million MDA Marcus National Blood Services Centre in Israel.
Also in 2016, Marcus was one of Trump's largest donors in 2016, giving $7 million to his campaign, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Personal life

Marcus has been married twice. He has two children with his first wife, Ruth: Frederick Marcus and Susanne Marcus Collins. With his second wife, Billi, he has a stepson, Michael Morris.