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Author Topic: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer  (Read 1082 times)

Offline y04185

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Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« on: December 27, 2011, 06:51:20 AM »
Full story


Rep. Ed Pastor, D-Ariz., is a member of a not-so-exclusive club of Capitol Hill millionaires.

When Representative Ed Pastor was first elected to Congress two decades ago, he was comfortably ensconced in the middle class. Mr. Pastor, a Democrat from Arizona, held $100,000 or so in savings accounts in the mid-1990s and had a retirement pension, but like many Americans, he also owed the banks nearly as much in loans.

Today, Mr. Pastor, a miner’s son and a former high school teacher, is a member of a not-so-exclusive club: Capitol Hill millionaires. That group has grown in recent years to include nearly half of all members of Congress — 250 in all — and the wealth gap between lawmakers and their constituents appears to be growing quickly, even as Congress debates unemployment benefits, possible cuts in food stamps and a “millionaire’s tax.”

Mr. Pastor buys a Powerball lottery ticket every weekend and says he does not consider himself rich. Indeed, within the halls of Congress, where the median net worth is $913,000 and climbing, he is not. He is a rank-and-file millionaire. But compared with the country at large, where the median net worth is $100,000 and has dropped significantly since 2004, he and most of his fellow lawmakers are true aristocrats.

'1 percenters'
Largely insulated from the country’s economic downturn since 2008, members of Congress — many of them among the “1 percenters” denounced by Occupy Wall Street protesters — have gotten much richer even as most of the country has become much poorer in the last six years, according to an analysis by The New York Times based on data from the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit research group.

Congress has never been a place for paupers. From plantation owners in the pre-Civil War era to industrialists in the early 1900s to ex-Wall Street financiers and Internet executives today, it has long been populated with the rich, including scions of families like the Guggenheims, Hearsts, Kennedys and Rockefellers.

But rarely has the divide appeared so wide, or the public contrast so stark, between lawmakers and those they represent.

The wealth gap may go largely unnoticed in good times. “But with the American public feeling all this economic pain, people just resent it more,” said Alan J. Ziobrowski, a professor at Georgia State who studied lawmakers’ stock investments.

There is broad debate about just why the wealth gap appears to be growing. For starters, the prohibitive costs of political campaigning may discourage the less affluent from even considering a candidacy. Beyond that, loose ethics controls, shrewd stock picks, profitable land deals, favorable tax laws, inheritances and even marriages to wealthy spouses are all cited as possible explanations for the rising fortunes on Capitol Hill.

What is clear is that members of Congress are getting richer compared not only with the average American worker, but also with other very rich Americans.

While the median net worth of members of Congress jumped 15 percent from 2004 to 2010, the net worth of the richest 10 percent of Americans remained essentially flat. For all Americans, median net worth dropped 8 percent during that period, based on inflation-adjusted data from Moody’s Analytics.

Going back further, the median wealth of House members grew some two and a half times between 1984 and 2009 in inflation-adjusted dollars, while the wealth of the average American family has actually declined slightly in that same time period, according to data cited by The Washington Post in an article published Monday on its Web site.

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Offline Ken

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #1 on: December 27, 2011, 09:21:46 AM »
how can that be , they on make $176,000  a year. 

Offline bigram$

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #2 on: December 27, 2011, 10:56:40 AM »
 
how can that be , they on make $176,000  a year. 

 :lmao:


Money is the universal corruptor and we act like its not everyday ...... we might as well pray to the almighty dollar

Lord save us

Online Wildman78

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #3 on: December 27, 2011, 11:19:47 AM »
how can that be , they on make $176,000  a year. 

They make wise investments?  ::)

Offline Ken

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #4 on: December 27, 2011, 11:51:32 AM »
They sure do . The average amercan get 5% gain from the stock market, the average hedge fund manger get 7%, but your average member of Congress get 12% per year.

Offline y04185

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #5 on: December 27, 2011, 01:10:28 PM »
how can that be , they on make $176,000  a year. 

They make wise investments?  ::)

No more calls please.  We have a winner.
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Offline Professor

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #6 on: December 27, 2011, 01:20:30 PM »
That's what happens when you set up your own Foundations and take money from both sides. Eddie Murphy put this business out there years ago.

When Sarah Palin quits being the governor so she can take 10K and 15K speaking engagements , its that serious

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #7 on: December 27, 2011, 03:52:01 PM »
Why do you think that so many spend millions to get elected?  :lol: Perks!!

Offline Bison 4 Life

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #8 on: December 27, 2011, 05:06:33 PM »
Negro Congressmen/women aren't that rich.

Santa Claus

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #9 on: December 27, 2011, 06:49:46 PM »
Not part of the system historically. Different set of criteria.

Offline Ken

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #10 on: December 27, 2011, 07:05:11 PM »
B4L we have a black congress man from Houston who is worth 11 milliion.

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #11 on: December 27, 2011, 07:16:17 PM »
 :)

Offline Cholly

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #12 on: December 27, 2011, 11:32:52 PM »
I think MOST people are misinterpreting this data.

It isn't that people in congress are getting richer; it's that richer people are getting into congress!!!

And THAT ladies and gentlemen... is a BAD thing.  :no:


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Online Strike79

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #13 on: December 28, 2011, 10:48:29 AM »
I think MOST people are misinterpreting this data.

It isn't that people in congress are getting richer; it's that richer people are getting into congress!!!

And THAT ladies and gentlemen... is a BAD thing.  :no:
Cholly.........yours is probably the more accurate analysis.  And, YES!, that is a BAD thing.  And we are seeing the consequences of that with these folks - Democrats AND Republicans - abandoning and moving away from policy positions that will benefit the middle class.  When the so-called "Founding Fathers" set this whole thing up, the idea was that folks would go to Washington, serve a couple of terms or so, then return to their home districts, resuming whatever life they had before.  Now mofos are going up there and serving for freaking DECADES!!!!   >:(

Guys, I honestly think movements like the various "Occupy" campaigns across the country is only the beginning.  I REALLY DO think that, when its all said and done, you are going to have people marching in the streets, similarly to that which you see in the so-called Third World countries.

This new year will present MANY challenges for us all.  :(

Offline Bison 4 Life

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Re: Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer
« Reply #14 on: December 28, 2011, 10:51:20 AM »
The next time bomb is credit for college education. That will create a movement across the nation that you won't believe.

 

 

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