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The Millionaires Who Rule Us
March 10, 2008
By John W. Whitehead
“The very
rich,” observed F. Scott Fitzgerald, “are
different from you and me.” And nowhere is this
so-called difference more apparent than in the growing
divide between poor and working class Americans and
the rich who rule over us.
While working
class Americans are getting poorer (there are five
million more poor people today than in 2005), studies
show that the rich are indeed getting richer.
According to the Center for American Progress, 37
million Americans, a size roughly equivalent to the
population of California, live below the official
poverty line. Thus, in a nation of almost 297 million
people, 12.6 percent are poor (for instance, a family
of four that makes less than $19,971 is considered
poor). And one out of every three Americans is
considered low-income.
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At the other end
of the spectrum, 19 percent of the nation’s income
is held by the richest one percent of Americans who,
according to former New York Times reporter
David Cay Johnston, have gotten richer as a result of
taxes, subsidies and regulatory policies that “take
from the many to give to the already superrich.”
In his latest
book, Free Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans
Enrich Themselves at Government Expense and Stick You
With the Bill, Johnston explains that the trend
of government policies favoring the superrich began
when Ronald Reagan became president and has continued
through the Clinton and Bush administrations. “The
400 highest-income Americans—people who on average
make well over $100 million a year—were paying 30
cents on the dollar when (Bill) Clinton came to
office, 22 cents when he left,” said Johnston.
“Under (George W.) Bush, they’re paying 17.”
A number of
America’s wealthy elite are also on the
government’s payroll, serving in the U.S. Congress.
For example, the Center for Responsive Politics
reported in 2006 that about half of the Senate’s 100
members are also millionaires and their average net
worth is $8.9 million.
Even those members
of Congress who do not belong to the so-called
“Millionaire’s Club” enjoy a host of
congressional perks. In addition to their six-figure
salaries, our representatives also receive millions to
maintain offices in their home state and in the
nation’s capital, as well as other benefits such as
free life insurance, a generous retirement plan for
life, 32 fully reimbursed road trips home a year, as
well as travel to foreign lands—all of which comes
at taxpayer expense. And then there are the
“extras” ranging from discounts in Capitol Hill
tax-free shops and restaurants, $10 haircuts at the
Congressional barbershop and free reserved parking at
Washington National Airport to use of the House gym or
Senate baths for $100 a year, free fresh-cut flowers
from the Botanic Gardens and free assistance in the
preparation of income taxes.
Little wonder with
such entitlement that elected officials who have, and
have in abundance, are ill-equipped to relate to the
struggles of those who have little to nothing at all.
We see this in a multitude of ways, from hastily
passed laws that infringe on our rights to pork barrel
legislation that primarily caters to special interest
groups. How else to explain the fact that taxpayers
who live from paycheck to paycheck have, in years
past, found themselves paying $50 million for an
indoor rainforest in Iowa, $500,000 for a teapot
museum in North Carolina and another $500,000 for a
national wild turkey federation in South Carolina?
This disconnect
became particularly evident in 2005 when those in
Congress who had no trouble voting themselves pay
increases rejected a minimum wage hike from $5.15 an
hour to $6.25 for blue-collar workers. Such
self-serving behavior arises in part out of the
privileged, rarefied world in which our elected
representatives reside. Fast forward to the present
day, with the nation in a recession and Americans
losing jobs at an alarming rate, and we find President
Bush, born to wealth, seemingly surprised to find gas
prices hurtling toward the $4 a gallon mark.
This brings me to
the 2008 bid for the White House, where the leading
contenders are no strangers to wealth. Indeed, John
McCain boasts an individual net worth of $29.21
million, while Hillary Clinton’s personal fortune is
in the $10 million range (combined with her husband,
her assets are between $10 million and $50 million).
And Barack Obama, the “poor man” of the lot, has
assets valued up to $1.1 million. However, his $1.9
million book advance in 2005 puts him on track to
catch up with McCain and Clinton.
So what does this
mean for “we the people”?
It means that the
once-cherished idea that any American citizen, no
matter their station in life, could someday become
president of the United States has been reduced to
little more than a pipedream. Only the wealthy, or
those connected to great wealth, have much chance of
holding high office anymore. This is illustrated by
the fact that Clinton, Obama and McCain have already
spent nearly $300 million for the privilege of sitting
in the Oval Office.
But it is the
common person—you and I—who, by participation in
government, not just voting, should determine
governmental policy. As Abraham Lincoln observed,
“Wise men established these great self-evident
truths, that when in the distant future some man, some
faction, some interest, should set up the doctrine
that none but rich men, or none but white men, were
entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness, their posterity should look up again at the
Declaration of Independence and take courage to renew
the battle which their fathers began.”
WC: 924
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