Good Monday evening. We’re closely watching reactions to the Republican tax plans, the Koch brothers’ role helping to finance Meredith’s purchase of Time Inc., and the leadership battle at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. (Want this in your own email inbox each morning? Here’s the sign-up.)

More business moguls come out against the Republican tax plans.

Republicans’ latest stab at tax reform would likely be a boon to business moguls. But not everyone is interested.

Ken Griffin of Citadel said that he doesn’t need his taxes cut that much. Here’s what he said earlier today:

“You would usually reserve tax reform of this nature for right in the midst of a recession,” the billionaire said in an interview with CNBC’s Leslie Picker. “Do we need to cut taxes as much as we are? Probably not. Do we need to reform taxes, simply taxes, and keep America competitive. Absolutely.”

And Randy Levine, the president of the Yankees, wrote an open letter to President Trump on the conservative news site Newsmax calling for big changes to the proposed tax plans. From his missive:

When you ran and won, you ran on draining the swamp, not giving new life to it. You ran on tax cuts, not on the swamp’s idea of tax reform where special interests win. This is a plan that helps Wall Street, hedge funds, private equity managers, real estate and oil and gas partnerships and individuals who disguise income as profits or distributions.

It’s worth noting a couple of things:

• Mr. Griffin might enjoy slightly less of a tax break than other financiers, since both the House and Senate plans would restrict carried interest’s lower tax rate to investments held for at least three years. But as CNBC previously pointed out, hedge fund managers generally don’t get much carry in the first place.