Instead, the 74-year-old expresses a diplomatic blanket disappointment with the tone and content of America's current political debate.
"And I haven't decided who to vote for because I'm waiting for someone to have a responsible conversation and address the issues that affect the American people."
Betting on the debate
Wynn calls this the most extraordinary US presidential campaign he's ever witnessed.
"What's disappointing at this time? Just the rhetoric around it, and just in the way how much of a circus it has become," he says.
"Any one of these people (Clinton or Trump) has the capacity of doing something intelligent and positive, but for some reason the campaign doesn't allow that to emerge and I am hoping that when we get to the debates we might really get substantive exchange."
Applied ambition
While confounded by American politics, Wynn is far clearer about the formula that's guided his own success.
"Most people I know that are successful have a few things in common that are undeniable. Driving ambition, and they have applied that to something they're good at, that they love doing ... and they are fun to be around, especially when they're talking about their passion," he tells Kapur.
Wynn's passion for the casino industry is clear. He speaks of his close involvement in the conception and design of his resorts -- a process he manages in conjunction with his architect, DeRuyter Butler, and his interior designer, Roger Thomas -- and his desire to make luxury available to everyone through the publicly accessible parts of his resorts.
And his ambition shines through when he talks about his involvement in opening up the once-small enclave of Macau to international casino operators, his ongoing support of the community there, and the "abnormal" return he has received on his investment there.
Yet it's clear he also abides by a simple philosophy to not sweat the small stuff.
"In business or in life, focus on the things over which you do have some control. And don't fret about all the other problems. Most of the time they don't come true anyway!" he says.
Life's pauses
Wynn was not born with wealth.
His father, Michael Weinberg, was a Jew who was raised by a nice but "dirt poor" foster family.
Weinberg dropped out of high school, aged 16, and turned his artistic talents to painting signs for shops. But quickly he realized that the best way to make money during the depression era was as a sign-painter for Coca Cola.
He mastered hand-painting the soda company's iconic French-style "C," and -- after learning the firm wouldn't employ Jews -- changed his name from Weinberg to Wynn.
"He had invented a pseudonym to avoid anti-Semitism, he got the job, and at 18 years old, he had a car and was, he was a Yankee Doodle guy," says Wynn.
Michael Wynn went on to run a string of bingo parlors across the US, but when he died in 1963 the company was $350,000 in debt.
It took Wynn junior to turn things around.
"Fast forward to 1997 and Fortune Magazine has a cover every year with the 10 most admired companies in America, and that year we were number two behind Coca Cola," Wynn says.
In 2015, on the 10th anniversary of the Wynn Las Vegas -- a luxury resort on the Las Vegas Strip, in Nevada -- Coca Cola made several hundred thousand cases of a Wynn commemorative issue, one of which was delivered to Steve Wynn's office.
Wynn says he turned the bottle around to look at the back and discovered his signature "Wynn" on the bottle.
"Forget the hotels and the jets and the wealth and the good luck and the children, and the grandchildren, what would happen if my father could see a Coke bottle with the name he invented on it?" he says.
"That's a moment in life where you just pause, right?"
A rare pause, perhaps, for a businessman who clearly has plenty of passion and drive left to give.