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The Clintons cash in: Wealth and American politics
By Joe Kay
8 April 2008
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In tax filings released last week, Democratic Party presidential
hopeful Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York and her husband, former
President Bill Clinton, reported earnings of some $109 million
in the years 2000 to 2007.
These figures put the Clintons, who have become something of
a political dynasty, among the top .01 percent of taxpayers in
the US, according to the Wall Street Journal, or among
the 14,500 richest families, according to Britains Sunday
Times. By either calculation, they are firmly entrenched in
the wealthiest portion of the population.
The total income translates to about $13.6 million a year.
Even after taxes, the Clintons pulled in $10 million a year, or
about 200 times the median family income in the United States.
The Clinton duos income has risen astronomically over
the past eight years and its meteoric rise began immediately after
the end of the presidents term in office in 2001. Forbes
magazine noted, In 2000, Bill Clintons final year
in office, the First Couples income was $350,000; the next
year, it rose to $16 million. Their most lucrative years were
2004 and 2007, when they twice made $20 million. In other
words, in 2007 the Clintons made 57 times more than they did in
2000. These are remarkable figures.
Particularly significant is the utterly shameless manner in
which Bill Clinton has leveraged his status as a former president
and celebrity into a personal fortune.
A bit less than half of the couples income, approximately
$52 million, came from speeches given by Bill Clinton, primarily
to corporations and business groups, generally at the rate of
$100,000 to $450,000 an appearance. These payments are rendered
not so much for the content of the speeches themselves, which
are negligible in every respect, but rather as something of a
lubricant between the cogwheels of the corporate and political
establishments.
The list of companies hosting the former president includes:
Wall Street firms Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers; corporate
giants General Motors, IBM and Cisco Systems; and business trade
groups including the National Association of Realtors and the
Mortgage Bankers Association. Many of the companies are major
donors to Hillary Clintons current campaign for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
In addition to speaking fees, the Clintons earned together
about $40 million from royalties on their books, and another $15
million or so through investments, particularly in one investment
fund run by a close Clinton supporter, supermarket magnate Ron
Burkle. With a net worth of $3.5 billion, Burkle ranks 307th on
a recent Fortune list of the worlds richest individuals.
For most of the period covered by the filings, Bill Clinton
has served as a financial advisor for Burkles
fund, Yucaipa Global Opportunities Fund. He has used his name
and contacts to pull in investors for Burklehe is a rainmaker
in the lexicon of American business. Clinton is set to leave the
fund soon, to avoid conflict of interest charges if his wife receives
the Democratic presidential nod. A departure agreement is expected
to net Clinton an additional $20 million.
Burkle is a major Democratic Party contributor and helped organize
a $1 million fundraiser for Hillary Clinton last March at his
Beverly Hills mansion. He has developed close ties with members
of the Democratic establishment in California, including the Speaker
of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, among others. He
has also established links with the trade union bureaucracy in
the state.
Burkles investment fund, Yucaipa, has come under criticism
for some shady investment practices. In one deal, Bill Clinton
was brought on board to persuade the Teamsters union to accept
a 15 percent wage cut at Allied Holdings, a transportation services
and logistics company, to bring it out of bankruptcy after it
was bought up by Yucaipa.
Yucaipa was also invested in a Brazilian company that has been
accused of keeping workers in near-slavery conditions. (See: Why the Clintons
profiting off near-slavery is not a campaign issue)
The Clinton campaign has pointed to the familys charitable
contributions to distract attention from the enormous family income,
but even here there are questions. The Wall Street Journal
editorial page, which of course has its own reasons for criticizing
the Clintons, pointed out Monday, Intriguingly, nearly all
the donations went to the Clinton Family Foundation, which has
disbursed only half the money. The Clintons can thus use the foundation
for, er, strategic giving, such as the $100,000 it donated last
year to a local South Carolina librarythe day after Mrs.
Clinton debated in that key primary state.
The Clinton Family Foundation began disbursing most of its
funds only after Hillary Clinton announced her election campaign.
The Journal continues, Similar conflict-of-interest
questions apply to the separate William Jefferson Clinton Foundation,
for which the couple has so far refused to release a list of donors.
Such a list could contain more of the likes of Canadian mining
tycoon Frank Giustra, who took Mr. Clinton along on a trip to
Kazakhstan as a character reference, won a Kazakh mining concession,
and gave more than $30 million to the foundation.
The Sunday Times, meanwhile, noted, In 2006 the
couple acquired an interest through a blind trust in a private
investment fund based in the Cayman Islands, which is connected
to Haim Saban. He is a billionaire Hollywood mogul and a big fundraiser
for Hillary Clinton. Such filthy connections abound.
Wealth in American politics is hardly something new, of course.
Several political dynasties in the 20th century have been associated
with vast family fortunesthe Roosevelts, the Kennedys and
the Rockefellers, for example.
What is remarkable now is the ubiquity of vast wealth in the
political process and the brazen fashion in which politicians
of both parties use their access to public office as a means for
personal enrichment. This has become an increasingly prominent
aspect of American politics over the past several decades.
Without idealizing any US president in the modern era, trusted
defenders of the existing social order to a man, the notion of
cashing in on a term or two in the White House for
personal gain was largely unknown until the Reagan-Bush-Clinton
era. According to an anecdote that may or may not be apocryphal,
when President Harry Truman was preparing to leave office, he
reportedly asked Secretary of State Dean Acheson how he ought
to conduct himself after his term was completed. Acheson, the
story goes, responded, As the American people would have
you conduct yourself.
What in an earlier period would have been recognized and characterized
as corruption is now the norm, practiced openly and shamelessly.
If not during office, then immediately afterward, politicians
feel perfectly free to stick their noses in the trough.
In their personal evolution, the Clintons embody a certain
transformations of the Democratic Party itself. They have become
members of a social milieu that the policies of the Democrats
helped createa layer that became hugely wealthy during the
1990s, when inequality in the US soared to extraordinary levels,
largely though stock market speculation.
The Clintons are hardly alone in their good fortune. While
the Democratic Party has always represented a section of the ruling
class, increasingly its leading figures are themselves fabulously
wealthy, either coming directly from the corporate world, marrying
into wealth, or leveraging their political ties to big business
to open up doors and prepare for careers on corporate boards of
directors
The Obamas are not yet at the level of the Clintons, but they
have aspirations. In any case, Barack Obama and his wife are better
off now than the Clintons were in 1992, the year of Bill Clintons
first presidential run.
In 2005 and 2006, the Obamas reported an average income of
$1.3 million, five times more than they made before Obama was
elected to the US Senate. Election to the presidency would open
doors for Obama to national and global corporations that, after
a few years, would make this income seem like pocket change. As
the Illinois senator recently told Business Week magazine,
I believe in entrepreneurship. I believe in capitalism,
and I want to do what works.
All three leading contenders for the Democratic nomination
in 2008 were millionaires. John Edwards, the former North Carolina
senator and candidate for the Democratic nomination, was estimated
in 2003 to be worth anywhere from $13 to $60 million.
About half of US Senators and nearly a third of US Representatives
are millionaires, many of them Democrats. Naturally, the Republican
Party has no shortage of multi-millionaires. In terms of personal
wealth, Clinton trailed only former Massachusetts governor Mitt
Romney among major presidential candidates.
At the same time, access to personal wealth has become almost
a prerequisite for achieving political office. An individual with
a large personal fortune can very easily become a major contender
in a presidential race; however, it is virtually impossible for
parties or individuals without access to such funds to even obtain
ballot status in the majority of American states.
The wealth of the leading Democrats makes a mockery of their
occasional populist rhetoric. These people do not and cannot stand
for the little man or woman. Last week,
for example, Clinton met briefly with protesting independent truckers
in Pennsylvania demanding that something be done about ruinous
diesel fuel prices. Signs called for fair fuel prices.
For the New York senator, this made for a useful photo opportunity.
However, Clintons 2008 presidential bid has received
almost $900,000 in donations from the energy and natural resources
sector as a whole, according to OpenSecrets.org, more than Republican
Sen. John McCain of Arizona, and over $300,000 from oil and natural
gas companies. Having paid the piper, these corporations call
the tune.
The arguments by various left liberal forces, like the Nation
magazine, that progressives should exert pressure
on Clinton and Obama in order to move them to the left are empty
and absurd. These figures in the Democratic Party are millionaire
politicians, who have enriched themselves along with the rest
of a crass, shortsighted nouveau riche. They have no intention
of hindering in any serious manner the private accumulation of
fortunes by their fellow millionaires.
The direct rule by the wealthy exposes the degeneration of
what is supposed to be the democratic process in the United States.
See Also:
Independent truckers stage protests in
US
[3 April 2008]
Clinton, Obama, McCain defer
to Wall Street
[29 March 2008]
Militarism, hypocrisy, and
the Democratic Party: Hillary Clinton speaks to students in San
Diego
[13 February 2008]
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