Paul Ryan’s Faux Populism
On Friday, Paul Ryan, the presumptive Republican vice-presidential nominee, made the most populist speech of this campaign season.
“It’s the people who are politically connected, it’s the people who have access to Washington that get the breaks,” he told an enthusiastic crowd of over 2,000 at a high school gym in Virginia.
“Well, no more. We don’t want to pick winners and losers in Washington… . Hardworking taxpayers should be treated fairly and it should be based on whether they’re good, whether they work hard and not who they know in Washington. That’s entrepreneurialism. That’s free enterprise.”
Sounds good, but earlier this week – three days after being picked as Romney’s running-mate – Ryan went to Las Vegas to pay homage to Sheldon Adelson, the casino billionaire who is the poster boy for using money to become “politically connected” in Washington, and getting the “breaks” that come with it. Adelson has promised to donate up to $100 million to make sure Romney and Ryan are in the White House next year.
Much of Adelson’s fortune comes from his casino in Macau, in China, via his money-greased access to Washington.
When China’s pitch for the 2008 Olympics was endangered by a House resolution opposing the bid because of China’s “abominable human rights record,” Adelson phoned Tom DeLay, then House majority whip and recipient of Adelson’s political generosity — urging him to block the resolution, which DeLay promptly did. The next day, according to the New York Times, a Chinese vice premier promised Mr. Adelson an endless line of gamblers to the Macau casino.
The money Adelson has committed to putting Romney and Ryan into the White House is a business investment. Adelson has a lot riding on the 2012 election.
Last year, his Las Vegas Sands Corporation came under investigation by the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission for possible violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act — bribing Chinese officials to help expand its casino in Macau.
The U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles, meanwhile, is investigating whether the Sands Corporation violated federal money-laundering laws by accepting more than $100 million from high-rolling gamblers accused of drug trafficking and embezzlement, rather than reporting the suspicious funds to the government.
Ryan has also been a major recipient of contributions from billionaire energy moguls Charles and David Koch. Koch Industries PAC has donated more than $100,000 to Ryan’s campaigns and his leadership PAC – more than any other corporate PAC, according to a NY Times analysis of campaign records.
You see, Koch industries spans a variety of oil and gas investments – whose value would be compromised if Congress and the White House got serious about climate change.
Small wonder Paul Ryan has emerged as one of Congress’s most outspoken skeptics of climate change. He has also repeatedly voted against energy efficiency standards, including a House vote to prohibit the EPA from regulating greenhouse gases.
Several months ago, when I debated Paul Ryan on ABC-TV’s “This Week,” he said we need to shrink the size of government because big corporations and wealthy individuals otherwise use government to their advantage.
“If the power and money are going to be here in Washington, that’s where the influence is going to go … that’s where the powerful are going to go to influence it,” he said.
It’s an odd argument coming from Ryan because his proposed budget doesn’t shrink government by cutting benefits and payments to big business and the rich. He increases military payments to defense contractors, for example, slashes Wall Street regulations, and gives giant tax benefits to the rich.
His budget shrinks government mainly by cutting benefits and payments to the poor and lower-income Americans. Over 60 percent of his spending cuts target programs for Americans in the bottom third of the income ladder.
Ryan is correct when he says “it’s the people who are politically connected, it’s the people who have access to Washington that get the breaks.”
But his faux populism obscures the main point. A much smaller government still dominated by money would continue to do the bidding of billionaires like casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, energy moguls like the Koch bothers, military contractors, and other high rollers now actively trying to put Ryan and Romney into the White House.
It just wouldn’t do anything for the rest of us.
This article was originally posted on Robert Reich's blog.
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12 comments on "Paul Ryan’s Faux Populism"
August 19, 2012 2:06pm
SWINNEY BIG THREE
1. Fed Fund Campaigns-Elections—6 months--3 primary--3 general--
Free equal TV time—no $$$$ involved---Debate a week=12=adequate to evaluate candidates
2. Since no need for $$ BAN all federal employees from taking anything with a Financial value. Prison. This closes K Street Bribery.
3. Progressive Flat Tax By Group—Pay as % of income not AGI loaded with deductions.
Burn Tax Book. This gets $1100B to balance the budget and start pay down of debt.
Start over—An exemption must serve the common good not a fat wallet
SWINNEY BIG THREE TAKES US FROM CURRENT CORPOCRACY BACK TO A DEMOCRACY
August 19, 2012 10:24am
The people who need to read articles such as this one by Robert Reich are too busy watching the intellectually challenged commentators/clowns on FOX. These people will never raise their awareness because it takes an effort to check the trash being fed them on FOX, or even think for that matter. Vacuous head-nodders - just like the Grand Old Party and Corporate America likes them. Else how would they lead them willingly to the cliff?
August 18, 2012 9:12pm
Left wing foundations have endowments that are at least 10 times the size of those of the Right. The Ford Foundation alone has over $5 billion. This whole idea that big money follows the Republicans is just untrue.
Sheldon Adelson is doing exactly what everyone with money should do in the US. Fight to keep the same opportunities that made HIM rich - open for others.
Ryan is a great choice for VP.
August 18, 2012 7:12pm
CRACY! TAX THE RICH OVER THE FISCAL CLIFF
August 18, 2012 3:53pm
It's a human need to want not to think, to not make choices, to have choices made for you. The right promises that there is no need for those dirty unAmerican 'civil rights' to liberty or thought as they will do that for you. It's a very comfortable place to be--large patriarchal organizations taking care of their sheep, just like religion.
Hopefully people are beginning to understand that their lives are getting worse by allowing a plutocracy to fester.
Just today I saw a nice American Christian family tooling along in their Ford Excursion at 8 miles per gallon, eating hotdogs and apple pie, "God Bless America" sticker flying proudly on the bumper, oblivious to the sate of climate change or anything else, complaisant to let others do their bidding--or so I though. On the right side of the bumper, in bright red letters, was the message:
FACTS NOT FOX
That was a shocking refresher for me.
August 18, 2012 2:36pm
The Republican climate change denying should start wearing thin as the farmers continue to take the beating for the Koch brothers economic benefit.
August 18, 2012 1:06pm
We are well on our way to being an oligarchy/plutocracy. The wealthy want nothing less than complete control over the lives of the hoi-poloi.
August 18, 2012 10:29am
The Koch-heads are involved? No surprise there. Vultures of a feather....
August 18, 2012 10:07am
Robert - keep up the good fight. A clear voice in this land of obfuscation is like a refreshing cool breeze in Kabul right now. The brazen duplicity of both Romney and Ryan to pander to the uninformed borders on egregious and falls safely within the parameters of dangerously disingenuous. Keep calling the kettle black and as it heats up, the closer we get to November, hopefully the majority will come to understand that what has come out of the kettle from the Romney camp has as much substance as vapor, but nonetheless leaving a malevolent stench from the spew.
August 18, 2012 12:25pm
Wow!
"brazen duplicity"
That about sums it up.
What chance do these gullible Tea Party "followers" have against the likes of Romney and Ryan?
We are becoming mired in a bog of stupid.
August 18, 2012 10:03am
Romney and Ryan are the primary tools for the new Plutocracy that is sweeping the world. And the people think they are too powerless to do anything about it. I cringe when they simply shrug their shoulders and "hope for the best." That may not happen.
August 18, 2012 9:25am
Repubulicans want billionaires to pick winners and losers for Washington, DC.
It's the way of the plutocracy/corporate kleptocracy/fascist idiocracy.