by Andy Kroll
There is a war underway. I'm not talking about Washington’s bloody
misadventures in Afghanistan and Iraq, but a war within our own borders.
It’s a war fought on the airwaves, on television and radio and over the
Internet, a war of words and images, of half-truth, innuendo, and
raging lies. I'm talking about a political war, pitting liberals against
conservatives, Democrats against Republicans. I'm talking about a
spending war, fueled by stealthy front groups and deep-pocketed
anonymous donors. It’s a war that's poised to topple what's left of
American democracy.
The right wing won the opening battle. In the 2010 midterm elections,
shadowy outside organizations (who didn’t have to disclose their donors
until well after Election Day, if at all) backing Republican
candidates doled out $190 million, outspending their adversaries by a more than two-to-one margin,
according to the Center for Responsive Politics. American Action
Network, operated by Republican consultant Fred Malek and former
Republican Senator Norm Coleman, spent $26 million; the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce plunked down $33 million; and Karl Rove's American Crossroads
and Crossroads GPS shelled out a combined $38.6 million. Their
investments in conservative candidates across the country paid off: the 62 House seats and six Senate seats claimed by Republicans were the most in the postwar era -- literally, a historic victory.
Knocked out of their complacency, no longer basking in the glow of
Barack Obama's 2008 victory, wealthy Democrats are now plotting their
response. Left-wing media mogul David Brock plans to create an outside
group dubbed American Bridge in response to Rove's Crossroads outfits
that will fight in the trenches of 2012 campaign spending. Many more
outfits like Brock's will surely follow, as liberal and centrist
Democrats brace for a promised $500 million onslaught by the Chamber of
Commerce and others of its ilk.
Even the Obama administration, which shunned outside groups in 2008,
has opened the door to a covert spending war. The Democrats will now
fight fire with fire. "Is small money better? You bet. But we're in a
fucking fight," Democratic strategist and fundraiser Harold Ickes
told me recently. "And if you're in a fistfight, then you're in a fistfight, and you use all legal means available."
Tomgram: Andy Kroll, How the Oligarchs Took America
[Note for TomDispatch readers: Here’s a reminder that, in return for an always needed contribution to TomDispatch, you can get a copy of Andrew Bacevich's latest bestseller, Washington Rules, Adam Hochschild's stirring King Leopold's Ghost, or my own The American Way of War signed
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We already know that it’s party time for the financial elite who gave real meaning to the phrase “economic meltdown” in 2008, that bonuses are soaring, that corporate profits for
the third quarter of 2010 are beyond the stratosphere, and that the
corporate chieftains and Wall Street titans of our new gilded age have,
as New York Times columnist Bob Herbert wrote recently, “waged economic warfare against everybody else and are winning big time.”
What we know far less about is the degree of the catastrophe they
inflicted on the rest of us. Here’s just one story that should be
front-paged in our major newspapers, but for which, at the moment, you
have to turn to Dollars and Sense,
a modest if intriguing economic publication. There, Jim Campen,
professor emeritus of economics at the University of
Massachusetts-Boston and an expert on racial discrimination in mortgage
lending, has written a piece entitled, “Update on Mortgage Lending Discrimination: After a Disastrous Detour, We’re Back Where We Started.”
It may not sound like much, but what a horror story it tells. If you
were black or Latino in the 1980s or early 1990s and wanted to buy a
home, the odds were that the banks had “redlined” your neighborhood and
were denying you mortgage applications at “disproportionately high
rates” compared to whites in similar economic circumstances. In other
words, you would have a tough time becoming a homeowner. Then came
those high-cost subprime loans whose fine print ensured that you would
never be able to pay them back. In a case of “reverse redlining,” they
were aggressively targeted at black and Latino neighborhoods in numbers
strikingly disproportionate to white neighborhoods. Not surprisingly,
when the housing bubble burst, the financial world shuddered, the
economy went south, and wave after wave of foreclosures began to sweep
across the country, it was black and Latino homeowners suffered the
most.
In Boston in 2006, the peak year of the subprime lending boom, Campen
discovered that “49% of all home-purchase loans to blacks, and 48% of
all home-purchase loans to Latinos, were high-cost loans, compared to
just 11% of all loans to whites.” In the carnage that followed, he
informs us, nearly 8% of black and Latino homeowners were foreclosed on,
compared to 4.5% of whites. In other words, while the people
TomDispatch Associate Editor Andy
Kroll calls “the New Oligarchs” bought Dom Pérignon and celebrated,
they had let loose the financial equivalent of a neutron bomb on
nonwhite neighborhoods in America. It’s a scandal that should be at the
top of the news, not in obscure magazines or at websites like this one,
and it’s just a small part of the larger, distinctly un-American
scandal that Kroll lays out below.
Tom
The New American Oligarchy: Creating a Country
Of the Rich, by the Rich, and for the Rich
by Andy Kroll
The endgame here, of course, is non-stop war. No longer will outside
groups come and go every two years. Now, such groups will be running
attack ads, sending out mailers, and deploying robo-calls year-round in
what is going to become a perpetual campaign to sway voters and elect
friendly lawmakers. "We're definitely building a foundation," was how
American Crossroads president Steven Law
put it.
This is what nowadays passes for the heart and soul of American
democracy. It used to be that citizens in large numbers, mobilized by
labor unions or political parties or a single uniting cause, determined
the course of American politics. After World War II, a swelling middle
class was the most powerful voting bloc, while, in those same decades,
the working and middle classes enjoyed comparatively greater economic
prosperity than their wealthy counterparts. Kiss all that goodbye. We're
now a country run by rich people.
Not surprisingly, political power has a way of following wealth.
What that means is: you can't understand how the rich seized control of
American politics, and arguably American society, without understanding
how a small group of Americans got so much money in the first place.
That story begins in the late 1970s and continues through the Obama
years, a period in which American policy has been so skewed toward the
rich that we're now living through the worst period of income inequality
in modern history. Consider the statistics: 50 years ago, the
wealthiest 1% of Americans accounted for one of every 10 dollars of the
nation's income; today, it's nearly one in every four. Between 1979 and
2006, the average post-tax household income (including benefits) of the
wealthiest 1% increased by 256%; the poorest households saw an increase
of 11%; middle class homes, 21%, much of which was due to the arrival of
two-job families.
Tax guru David Cay Johnston recently crunched
new Social Security Administration data and discovered an even starker
divide. On the one hand, the number of Americans earning a steady income
declined by 4.5 million between 2008 and 2009, and the average wage in
the U.S. dipped by 1.2%, to $39,055. On the other hand, the average wage
among Americans earning more than $50 million per year was $91 million
in 2008 and $84 million in 2009.
Harvard University economist Lawrence Katz put the situation Americans now find themselves in this way:
"Think of the
American economy as a large apartment block. A century ago -- even 30
years ago -- it was the object of envy. But in the last generation its
character has changed. The penthouses at the top keep getting larger and
larger. The apartments in the middle are feeling more and more squeezed
and the basement has flooded. To round it off, the elevator is no
longer working. That broken elevator is what gets people down the most."
Let's call those select few in the penthouse the New Oligarchy, an
awesomely rich sliver of Americans raking in an outsized share of the
nation's wealth. They're oil magnates and media tycoons, corporate
executives and hedge-fund traders, philanthropists and entertainers.
Depending on where you want to draw the line, they're the top 1%, or the
top 0.1%, or even the top 0.01% of the population. And when the Supreme
Court handed down its controversial Citizens United decision
in January, it broke the floodgates so that a torrent of anonymous
donations from this oligarchic class could flood back down from the
heights and inundate the political lands below.
"The Thirty-Year War"
How did we get here? How did a middle-class-heavy nation transform
itself into an oligarchy? You'll find answers to these questions in Winner-Take-All Politics,
a revelatory new book by political scientists Jacob Hacker and Paul
Pierson. The authors treat the present figures we have on American
wealth and poverty as a crime scene littered with clues and suspects,
dead-ends and alibis.
Unlike so many pundits, politicians, and academics, Hacker and
Pierson resist blaming the usual suspects: globalization, the rise of an
information-based economy, and the demise of manufacturing. The culprit
in their crime drama is American politics itself over the last three
decades. The clues to understanding the rise of an American oligarchy,
they believe, won’t be found in New York or New Delhi, but on Capitol
Hill, along Pennsylvania Avenue, and around K Street, that haven in a
heartless world for Washington’s lobbyists.
"Step by step and debate by debate," they write, "America's public
officials have rewritten the rules of American politics and the American
economy in ways that have benefitted the few at the expense of the
many."
Most
accounts of American income inequality begin in the 1980s with the
reign of President Ronald Reagan, the anti-government icon whose
"Reaganomics" are commonly fingered as the catalyst for today's
problems. Wrong, say Hacker and Pierson. The origins of oligarchy lay in
the late 1970s and in the unlikely figure of Jimmy Carter, a Democratic
president presiding over a Congress controlled by Democrats. It was
Carter's successes and failures, they argue, that kicked off what
economist Paul Krugman has labeled “the Great Divergence."
In 1978, the Carter administration and Congress took a red pen to the
tax code, slashing the top rate of the capital gains tax from 48% to
28% -- an enormous boon for wealthy Americans. At the same time, the
most ambitious effort in decades to reform American labor law in order
to make it easer to unionize died in the Senate, despite a 61-vote
Democratic supermajority. Likewise, a proposed Office of Consumer
Representation, a $15 million advocacy agency that was to work on behalf
of average Americans, was defeated by an increasingly powerful business
lobby.
Ronald Reagan, you could say, simply took the baton passed to him by
Carter. His 1981 Economic Recovery and Tax Act (ERTA) bundled a medley
of goodies any oligarch would love, including tax cuts for corporations,
ample reductions in the capital gains and estate taxes, and a 10%
income tax exclusion for married couples in two-earner families. "ERTA
was Ronald Reagan's greatest legislative triumph, a fundamental
rewriting of the nation's tax laws in favor of winner-take-all
outcomes," Hacker and Pierson conclude.
The groundwork had by then been laid for the rich to pull
definitively and staggering ahead of everyone else. The momentum of the
tax-cut fervor carried through the presidencies of George H.W. Bush and
Bill Clinton, and in 2000 became the campaign trail rallying cry of
George W. Bush. It was Bush II, after all, who told
a room full of wealthy donors at an $800-a-plate dinner, "Some people
call you the elites; I call you my base," and who pledged that his 2001
tax cuts would be a boon for all Americans. They weren't: according to
Hacker and Pierson, 51% of their benefits go to the top 1% of earners.
Those cuts will be around a lot longer if the GOP has its way. Take
Republican Congressman Dave Camp's word for it. On November 16th, Camp, a
Republican from Michigan, said
the only acceptable solution when it came to the Bush-era tax cuts was
not just upholding them for all earners, rich and poor, but passing more
such cuts. Anything in between, any form of compromise, including
President Obama's proposal to extend the Bush cuts for the working and
middle classes but not the wealthy, was "a terrible idea and a total non-starter."
Why should you care what Dave Camp says? Here’s the answer: in
January, he's set to inherit the chairman's gavel on the powerful House
Ways and Means Committee, the body tasked with writing the nation's tax
laws. And though most Americans wouldn't even recognize his name, Camp's
message surely left America's wealthy elites breathing a long sigh of
relief. You could sum it up like this: Fear not, wealthy Americans, your money is safe. The policies that made you rich aren't going anywhere.
Tear Down This Law
Where rewriting the tax code proved too politically difficult,
demolishing regulations worked almost as well. This has been especially
true in the world of finance. There, a legacy of deregulation
transformed banking from a relatively staid industry into a casino culture, ushering in an era of eye-popping profits, lavish bonuses, and the "financialization" of the American economy.
April 6, 1998: it's a useful starting point in the story of financial
deregulation. On that day, two well-known Wall Street denizens,
Citicorp and Travelers Group, agreed to a historic $140 billion merger.
The deal required much lobbying, but eventually the chiefs of these
banks won an exemption from the Glass-Steagall Act, the New Deal-era law
walling off commercial banks from riskier investment houses. The
resulting institution, dubbed Citigroup, would be the largest
supermarket bank in history, a marriage of teller windows and trading
desks, customer banking and high-stakes investing -- all suddenly under
one deregulated roof. It would prove an explosive, if not disastrous,
mix.
The merger stirred visions of a future in which the U.S. would
dominate the planet financially. All that stood in the way was undue
regulatory red tape. At least that's the way free marketeers like
then-Republican Senator Phil Gramm of Texas saw it. Gramm, who as an aide to presidential candidate John McCain infamously called America a "nation of whiners," was, in fact, the driving force behind two of the most influential pieces of deregulation in recent history.
In 1999, President Clinton signed the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, a bevy
of deregulatory measures that obliterated Glass-Steagall. In December of
the following year, Gramm quietly snuck
the 262-page Commodity Futures Modernization Act into a massive
$384-billion spending bill. Gramm's bill blocked regulators like the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) from cracking down on the
shadowy "over-the-counter derivatives" market, home to billions of
dollars of opaque financial instruments that would, years later, nearly
demolish the American economy.
As presidents, both Bill Clinton and George W. Bush wrapped their
arms around financial deregulation. As a result, in a binge of financial
gluttony, Wall Street grew fat in ways never previously seen. Between
1929, the year the Great Depression began, and 1988, Wall Street's
profits averaged 1.2% of the nation's gross domestic product; in 2005,
that figure peaked at 3.3% as industry bonuses soared ever-higher. In 2009, bad times for most Americans, bonuses hit $20 billion. So much wealth in so few hands. Nothing explains the rise of the new American oligarchy more starkly.
Of course, it's not just what politicians did that helped
create today's oligarchy, but what they failed to do. A classic example:
in the 1990s, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), a
private American accounting regulator, set its sights on a loophole big
enough to drive a financial Mack truck through. Until then, stock
options included in executives' skyrocketing pay packages -- potentially
worth tens of millions of dollars when exercised -- were valued at zero
when issued. That's right: zero, zilch, nada. When FASB and
the SEC tried to close the loophole, however, big business leapt to its
defense. An avalanche of money went into the pockets of an army of K
Street lobbyists and leviathan business trade associations. In the end,
nothing happened. Or rather, everything continued happening. The
loophole remained.
Citizen United's Brave New World
Hacker and Pierson ably guide us through 30 years of
"winner-take-all" policymaking, politicking, and -- from the point of
view of the wealthy -- judicious inaction. They offer an eye-opening
journey across the landscape that helped foster the New Oligarchs, but
one crucial vista appeared too late for the authors to include.
No understanding of the rise of our New Oligarchs could be complete
without exploring the effects of the Supreme Court's January Citizens United decision, which set their power in cement more effectively than any tax cut ever could. Before Citizens United, the rich used their wealth to subtly shape policy, woo politicians, and influence elections. Now, with
so much money flowing into their hands and the contribution faucets
wide open, they can simply buy American politics so long as the price is
right.
There's no mistaking how, in less than a year, Citizens United has radically tilted the political playing field. Along with several other major court rulings, it ushered
in American Crossroads, American Action Network, and many similar
groups that now can reel in unlimited donations with pathetically few
requirements to disclose their funders.
What the present Supreme Court, itself the fruit of successive
tax-cutting and deregulating administrations, has ensured is this: that
in an American “democracy,” only the public will remain in the dark.
Even for dedicated reporters, tracking down these groups is like chasing
shadows: official addresses lead to P.O. boxes; phone calls go
unreturned; doors are shut in your face.
The limited glimpse we have of the people bankrolling these shadowy outfits is a who's-who of the New Oligarchy: the billionaire Koch Brothers ($21.5 billion); financier George Soros ($11 billion); hedge-fund CEO Paul Singer (his fund, Elliott Management, is worth $17 billion); investor Harold Simmons (net worth: $4.5 billion); New York venture capitalist Kenneth Langone ($1.1 billion); and real estate tycoon Bob Perry ($600 million).
Then there's the roster of corporations who have used their largesse
to influence American politics. Health insurance companies, including
UnitedHealth Group and Cigna, gave
a whopping $86.2 million to the U.S. Chamber to kill the public option,
funneling the money through the industry trade group America's Health
Insurance Plans. And corporate titans like Goldman Sachs, Prudential
Financial, and Dow Chemical have given millions more to the Chamber to lobby against new financial and chemical regulations.
As a result, the central story of the 2010 midterm elections isn’t
Republican victory or Democratic defeat or Tea Party anger; it’s this
blitzkrieg of outside spending, most of which came from right-leaning
groups like Rove's American Crossroads
and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. It's a grim illustration of what
happens when so much money ends up in the hands of so few. And with
campaign finance reforms soundly defeated for years to come, the
spending wars will only get worse.
Indeed, pundits predict that spending in the 2012 elections will
smash all records. Think of it this way: in 2008, total election
spending reached $5.3 billion,
while the $1.8 billion spent on the presidential race alone more than
doubled 2004's total. How high could we go in 2012? $7 billion? $10
billion? It looks like the sky’s the limit.
We don't need to wait for 2012 to arrive, however, to know that the
sheer amount of money being pumped into American politics makes a
mockery out of our democracy (or what's left of it). Worse yet, few
solutions exist to staunch the cash flow: the DISCLOSE Act, intended to counter the effects of Citizens United,
twice failed in the Senate this year; and the best option, public
financing of elections, can't even get a hearing in Washington.
Until lawmakers cap the amount of money in politics, while forcing
donors to reveal their identities and not hide in the shadows, the New
Oligarchy will only grow in stature and influence. Left unchecked, this
ultimate elite will continue to root out the few members of Congress not
beholden to them and their “contributions” (see: Wisconsin's Russ Feingold)
and will replace them with lawmakers eager to do their bidding, a
Congress full of obedient placeholders ready to give their donors what
they want.
Never before has the United States looked so much like a country of the rich, by the rich, and for the rich.