The untimely and completely avoidable death of Toys 'R' Us is perfect example of why private equity has earned the nickname "vulture capital." In 2004, Vornado, a real estate investment firm, and KKR and Bain Capital, both private equity firms, put up $6.6 billion to buy Toys 'R' Us. But they only needed to front 20 percent of that, borrowing the rest. Once they had control of the company, Toys 'R' Us was then responsible for paying off the rest of that massive loan. While the company remained profitable, it never became profitable enough to get out from under that tremendous debt burden. The company was paying $425 million to $517 million each year in interest alone, while suffering the same stagnation other brick-and-mortar businesses faced in an era of rising online shopping and shrinking middle class incomes. Had Vornado, KKR, and Bain Capital never come into the picture, the company might still be around today. Instead, Toys 'R' Us filed for bankruptcy in 2017, and in early 2018 it abruptly announced that all 900 of its U.S. and U.K. locations were shutting down or being sold, meaning more than 30,000 people were out of a job—with essentially no warning.

But Vornado, KKR and Bain didn't walk away empty handed, according to Giovanna De La Rosa, a former Toys 'R' Us employee, who was testifying Tuesday. "My coworkers and I were left with nothing," she told the legislators, "while Toys 'R' Us paid $470 million in fees to private equity owners. That'd be enough to pay over $14,000 in severance to each employee who lost their job."

Even when private equity doesn't choose to completely shut down a company, they can run the business and its employees into the ground. The Denver Post is an example of this: in 2010 the paper was acquired by Digital First Media, which is owned by Alden Global Capital. At the time, the Post had 200 employees and, unusual in an era of online news, was actually turning a profit. Despite that positive financial picture, Alden laid off staff to squeeze out more money, and by 2018 there were only 50 full-time employees still at the paper. The editorial board responded with a searing editorial, writing, "Denver deserves a newspaper owner who supports its newsroom. If Alden isn’t willing to do good journalism here, it should sell the Post to owners who will." A day later, Alden fired another 30 people.

Tuesday's hearing wasn't the first time Ocasio-Cortez has decried the practices of private equity. Taylor Swift is currently struggling over the right of her own songs—the back catalogue now belongs to music producers Scooter Braun and Scott Borchetta and the private firm Carlyle Group. Swift protested the sale when it happened, and now she claims that Braun and Borchetta's company is restricting her ability to play her older songs on television. Last Friday, Ocasio-Cortez voiced her support of Swift on Twitter, saying, "Private equity groups’ predatory practices actively hurt millions of Americans. Their leveraged buyouts have destroyed the lives of retail workers across the country, scrapping 1+ million jobs. Now they’re holding @taylorswift13’s own music hostage. They need to be reigned in."

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