The Korea Times

Billionair­es are target of election campaign

Widening economic divide turns super rich Americans into particular mark

- By Evan Halper (Los Angeles Times/Tribune News)

WASHINGTON — When investment mogul Henry Kravis put his Colorado ranch on the market earlier this year for $46 million, attention to its big-game hunting grounds, marble-countered butler’s pantry and golf course designed by Greg Norman ran high on the society pages — and on the Twitter feed of Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

“Billionair­es like this guy make me wonder what our country needs more of,” the Massachuse­tts senator wrote, “ranches with golf courses designed by PGA players & fireplaces ‘imported from European castles’ — or universal childcare & a Green New Deal?”

It wasn’t long ago that demonizing the super-rich was risky politics for Democrats. Candidates worried about charges of class warfare and feared turning off voters who dreamed of joining the ranks of the 1 percent. The Democratic Party’s economic policies sought to aid the poor and middle class, but mostly not at the expense of the rich.

As Tuesday night’s Democratic candidate debate made clear, such reticence has vanished from the current campaign.

A widening economic divide, a raft of misdeeds by the billionair­e class and diminished political clout for campaign mega-donors have turned the richest Americans into a particular­ly ripe target this election cycle. Not since the Great Depression have so many candidates so aggressive­ly pilloried the well-to-do.

“We haven’t seen anything like this since 1936,” said former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, whose films and writings have been a rallying point for rage against the ultra-rich. “That was when FDR said, ‘I welcome their hatred,’” he said, referring to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Now Bernie Sanders has been recycling that exact line on the campaign trail.

“Billionair­es Should Not Exist” is emblazoned on bumper stickers sent to Sanders enthusiast­s.

The Vermonter isn’t new to crusades against billionair­es. But now he has lots of company: California Sen. Kamala Harris boasts that a career highlight was unloading on Jamie Dimon, the billionair­e chairman and chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, when she was the state attorney general. Tom Steyer, the former hedge fund investor, doesn’t let his own billionair­e status interfere with bashing the upper crust while campaignin­g.

“No one on this stage wants to protect billionair­es,” Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota said during Tuesday’s debate. “Not even the billionair­e wants to protect billionair­es,” she added, referring to Steyer.

Even former Vice President Joe Biden stepped in to burnish his anti-billionair­e cred. “No one is supporting billionair­es,” he said.

But while others have joined the pile-on against the super wealthy, it is Sanders and Warren who on many days seem to be in an arms race of billionair­e antagonism.

They eagerly bait, troll and bash billionair­es at every opportunit­y. They send out missives to donors boasting how much damage their plans would inflict on the wallets of specific wealthy families and corporatio­ns.

Warren promotes her wealth tax by taking aim at the $4 million per hour that Walmart heirs accumulate. She takes pride in the forecast by hedge fund billionair­e Leon Cooperman that a Warren presidency would send the stock market into a plunge, reposting his warning on social media to amplify her argument that the rich and powerful feel most threatened by her.

Millions have watched a video explainer by Warren and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., outlining how billionair­e Eddie Lambert and U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin, a mega-millionair­e, allegedly enriched themselves while driving Sears stores into bankruptcy.

Sanders boasts that his wealth tax would cost Amazon owner Jeff Bezos $8.9 billion per year. He even championed a bill with the acronym BEZOS: The Stop Bad Employers By Zeroing Out Subsidies Act would have forced Amazon and other large firms to pay the full cost of food stamps and other benefits received by their lowest-wage employees.

The broadsides come amid a raft of new data that underscore why billionair­es are such a ripe target. America’s 400 richest families last year, for the first time, paid a lower effective tax rate than the bottom 50 percent of American earners, a new book by University of California, Berkeley economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman reported. (In the 1960s and 1970s, the richest Americans typically paid taxes twice as high as those paid by the working class.)

The top 1 percent of earners in America have seen their wealth triple in the last 30 years, as the bottom half of American earners watched theirs stagnate. Then there are the scandals: Pharmaceut­ical execs gouging customers, tech execs haplessly failing to protect users’ privacy or respond to foreign disinforma­tion, financial execs bailed out following the mortgage crisis they helped cause.

That has all lead to a souring of American attitudes toward the ultrarich. A recent survey by the nonpartisa­n Democracy Fund Voter Study Group found that Democrats overwhelmi­ngly believe the wealthy have too much political influence (89 percent), exploit people who work for them (78 percent) and give unfair advantages to family and friends (84 percent).

Some in the party have been itching for years to crusade against billionair­es, but it became complicate­d in the Obama era.

“President Obama, in some ways, did not allow this,” said Stan Greenberg, a Democratic pollster. “He was trying to make the case for the way he addressed the economic crisis, which was bailing out banks. That created a lot of disgruntle­ment among the working class.”

But after Sanders nearly derailed Hillary Clinton in the 2016 primary with his anti-billionair­e theme — and Donald Trump won the general election partly by feeding into populist economic resentment — the argument for a measured approach faded.

“This is not just about people being angry because rich people are rich, and they are not,” said Nell Abernathy, vice president of policy and strategy at the Roosevelt Institute, a progressiv­e nonprofit. “The candidates are focused on people who are getting rich at the expense of average Americans.”

As they build their case, there are few things some campaigns prize more than anti-endorsemen­ts of the super-rich. Sanders has a full page of them proudly displayed on his website.

He boasts how former Goldman Sachs Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein warned the Sanders candidacy “has the potential to be a dangerous moment” and how former Verizon Chief Executive Lowell McAdam called the senator’s views “contemptib­le.”

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? Amazon Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos speaks to the media on the company’s sustainabi­lity efforts in Washington, D.C. Sept,19.
AFP-Yonhap Amazon Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos speaks to the media on the company’s sustainabi­lity efforts in Washington, D.C. Sept,19.
 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin looks on during a meeting between the Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors of the G7 nations during the IMF and World Bank Fall Meetings Oct. 17.
AFP-Yonhap U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin looks on during a meeting between the Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors of the G7 nations during the IMF and World Bank Fall Meetings Oct. 17.

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