China Can’t Stop Talking About the Bill and Melinda Gates Divorce

China Can’t Stop Talking About the Bill and Melinda Gates Divorce
Billionaire Bill Gates, chairman and founder of Microsoft Corp., and his wife Melinda attend the Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, on July 11, 2015. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The divorce of Bill and Melinda Gates has sent shockwaves through China, where the Microsoft co-founder has achieved a level of fame unlike almost any other Western entrepreneur.

The “Bill Gates’ divorce” hashtag had generated more than 830 million views and 66,000 discussion posts on China’s Twitter-like platform Weibo by Wednesday—far surpassing the 91 million views accumulated when Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and MacKenzie Scott divorced in 2019.

Weibo users fretted about everything, from how the couple would divide their massive fortune to whether the divorce would affect Microsoft or their charitable foundation. Through their philanthropic organization, the pair have spent $53.8 billion on global health, poverty alleviation and other initiatives. Bill Gates is worth about $146 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, and the couple has pledged to give the vast majority of their wealth away to charity.

“You and Melinda have made huge contributions to people around the world. Even if you don’t hold hands together in future life, I hope your foundation can still continue and help more people,” one Weibo user wrote, responding to a post on Bill Gates’ official Weibo account that announced the divorce in Chinese.

Bill Gates and his wife Melinda Gates
Bill Gates and his wife Melinda Gates introduce the Goalkeepers event at the Lincoln Center in New York City on Sept. 26, 2018. (Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images)

While Bill Gates no longer runs Microsoft, the company has spent decades building goodwill with Beijing. Its products have a considerable presence in China, even as other Western tech companies have been locked out.

While Facebook is blocked, for example, Microsoft’s LinkedIn remains one of the few Western social media tools available in the mainland. The Bing search engine is also operational, while Google has been cut out for years.

And the success of the business has likely contributed to Bill Gates’ personal draw: He now has more than 4.1 million followers on Weibo, outnumbering Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s 1.7 million and Apple chief Tim Cook’s 1.4 million.

Even prominent tech figures in China joined the conversation on Weibo: Kai-fu Lee—the former head of Google China, who helped establish Microsoft Research Lab Asia, a hugely influential network in China—said it was hard for him to believe the news.

Based in Beijing, Microsoft Research Lab Asia has cultivated many Chinese tech talents, including Bytedance founder Zhang Yiming, Alibaba tech chief Wang Jian and former Baidu president Zhang Yaqin.

Bill Gates and Melinda Gates
Philanthropist and co-founder of Microsoft, Bill Gates (R) and his wife Melinda listen to the speech by French President Francois Hollande, prior to being awarded Commanders of the Legion of Honor at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France on April 21, 2017. (Kamil Zihnioglu/Reuters)

Bill and Melinda are “the most affectionate couple I’ve seen among celebrity entrepreneurs,” Lee wrote in a Weibo post.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation set up its Beijing office in 2007 and has since then worked with the Chinese regime on several domestic projects in the country, ranging from HIV intervention to poverty reduction.

Bill Gates himself has visited China more than a dozen times since the 1990s and cultivated friendly relations with top leaders. He was welcomed by former Chinese Communist Party leader Jiang Zemin in March 1994, right before China officially gained access to the Internet.

At that time, the Chinese regime was eager to open up its economy and catch up with the West in technology. The trip—during which Gates promised Jiang that Microsoft would help China develop its software industry—helped Microsoft accelerate its expansion in the Chinese market.

In 2006, Gates hosted former Chinese leader Hu Jintao for dinner at his home in the Washington state.

And last year, Chinese leader Xi Jinping wrote to Gates to thank him for his support in fighting the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, commonly known as novel coronavirus.

Gates was even hailed as “the Chinese people’s old friend” by the ruling Chinese Communist Party in 2018, a title that the party occasionally uses for foreigners it recognizes as having a deep friendship with.

Meanwhile, on social media, some distraught Chinese users even remarked that the divorce had shaken their beliefs about marriage. The couple had been married for 27 years.

“Even you are divorced,” one person wrote, responding to Bill Gates on Weibo. “How can the rest of us have hope of entering a marriage?”

The CNN Wire contributed to this report

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