The Guardian (USA)

Tax the rich: these one percenters want people like them to pay higher taxes

- Dominic Rushe in Washington DC

The sound system played Pink Floyd’s Money as the Patriotic Millionair­es assembled in the boutique Eaton hotel in Washington DC last week. After compulsory Covid tests there was a lot of well-heeled hugging and laughter among a crowd that looked like extras from Succession as they sat down at tables stacked with M&Ms stamped with “tax the rich”.

This was the first time since the pandemic that the Patriotic Millionair­es had assembled together in person. The group, founded in 2010, is made up of high net worth individual­s who believe – counterint­uitively these days – that the really rich should pay more taxes. And after a dozen often frustratin­g years some of them now believe change is coming.

In the White House, Joe Biden has proposed new taxes on households worth more than $100m. The war in Ukraine has shown that the internatio­nal community can, and will, crack down on oligarchs. Some of the workers who made fortunes for Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Starbucks’s Howard Schultz have successful­ly formed unions despite the millions both companies spent fighting them off.

“No one was talking about taxing the rich when we started,” said Morris Pearl, chair of the Patriotic Millionair­es and a former managing director at BlackRock, the largest money manager in the world.

Even the conversati­on seemed ridiculous under Donald Trump, Pearl added. “We have seen a huge change. You have a president talking about taxing the rich, people are talking about wealth taxes – those weren’t even fringe ideas 10 years ago. I’m not saying it’s going to happen and pass into law but there are conversati­ons at the highest levels.”

Part of the reason why those conversati­ons are happening is that the situation has got so bad. Speaker after speaker at the one-day conference highlighte­d how the very, very rich have hijacked the political system around the world, run down wages and exacerbate­d income inequality, ramming home the title of the conference: Oligarchs vs All of Us: The Fight for Power & Money.

Another member, Gary Stevenson, a British trader turned inequality economist, believes things are only going to get worse. Billionair­es made fortunes from soaring stock markets, property prices and other assets during the pandemic. Government handouts have largely helped the rich, he argues. “If nothing is done this is going to be a massive disaster,” he said. “However bad you think things are, I guarantee they will get much, much worse.”

When the pandemic struck there was talk of it being a great leveler – we were all in this together. In fact,

Covid-19 exacerbate­d economic and racial inequaliti­es. US billionair­es received a $1.1tn windfall as their wealth soared to record levels. The billionair­e class boomed in Asia and reached record levels in the UK. But as we emerge from the shadow of Covid-19, hoi poloi find themselves struggling with soaring inflation and rising cost of basics such as rent,utilities and food.

For Stevenson this enormous explosion of wealth is “end of civilizati­on stuff”. “There is one thing and one thing only that we can do,” he said. “We have got to take that money back.”

But are rich – and overwhelmi­ngly white – people the right people to push that message? Abigail Disney thinks so. Disney, the granddaugh­ter of Roy Disney, co-founder of the Walt Disney Company, sees her family as a synechdoch­e for what has happened to the rest of America.

The Disneys were already superrich by the time Disney, 62, was born but their wealth grew enormously just as the gap between rich and poor has grown. “Money changed my family,” she said, and not for the better. Now, she says, those rich people live in another world and are unable to see what the consequenc­es of rising inequality will be. Hearing that from one of their own breaks that barrier, she believes.

“The only people billionair­es will listen to are other billionair­es and multimilli­onaires. You need at least the two commas. And if they won’t listen, there are their children and their wives, and they will listen,” she said.

While her money opens the doors of power, Disney finds her message also discombobu­lates ordinary Americans. She is regularly assailed on Twitter for daring to suggest rich people should pay more taxes. The problem is that people have been convinced that “every single person in this country is a billionair­e waiting to happen”, in an orchestrat­ed campaign she believes was engineered to protect the wealth of the 1%.

Hearing one of the 1% suggest that maybe that dream is a nightmare makes people crazy, she said. “The pushback I get is: ‘You never worked a day in your life! You don’t know anything!’ Well, you are right, you are making my point for me! I should not have this power and influence. Just keep making my point for me,” she said.

“For me to be speaking out against my own supposed self-interest has a wow factor that catches the attention. I don’t want to ever stop doing that. We need to model what it looks like to not defend your own self-interest all the time. When you are fine and other people are not, you put aside your own self-interest and stick up for somebody else.”

The chance of Biden’s tax cuts making it through Congress are slim. US politician­s rely too heavily on the wealthy and some Democrats as well as Republican­s will balk at taxing them more. But Disney argues that the debate has changed. After the pandemic, US oligarchs aren’t the heroes they once were and, notably, Republican­s have so far steered clear of an all-out attack on Biden’s proposal.

“Four years ago if you’d said ‘billionair­es tax’ then they would have said you can’t bash billionair­es, you’re encouragin­g class warfare. I haven’t heard a whiff of that,” said Disney. “Let’s not kid ourselves, the other side has tested that and found it isn’t working. That class war rhetoric isn’t working any more. And that’s good news. Because if we don’t ruffle some feathers now, we are going to have a class war. A real one.”

 ?? Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? Abigail Disney: ‘For me to be speaking out against my own supposed self-interest has a wow factor that catches the attention.’ Photograph:
Bloomberg/Getty Images Abigail Disney: ‘For me to be speaking out against my own supposed self-interest has a wow factor that catches the attention.’ Photograph:

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