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Mark Shields
Mark Shields
19 May 2012
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5 May 2012
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This Time, Washington -- and the President -- Are Really 'Out of Touch'!

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It has always bothered me during our endless national campaigns when congressional candidates spend millions of dollars and years of their lives trying to persuade voters that he or she, the candidate, loathes Washington, D.C. (my adopted hometown of 45 years) and the federal government more than his or her opponent does.

Think about it: This is roughly comparable to someone applying to baby-sit your child by emphasizing how much she dislikes children or some young man, trumpeting his total commitment to nonviolence, while trying to join the SWAT team of the local police force.

Of course, many of these Washington-bashing candidates do win, and then overnight these new federal officeholders mostly spend every available hour and even more millions of dollars seeking to convince the folks back home that their own well-being and that of the nation depends upon the government-loathing, Washington-averse officeholder being returned in perpetuity to his government office in Washington, D.C.

But once in a while, I have to admit that the critics are right, that Washington, D.C., and even the highest-ranking federal officials, are out of touch or just plain out of it. That was clearly the case this past week when President Obama explained one reason Robert Gibbs was leaving his job as White House press secretary: "He's had a six-year stretch now where basically he's been going 24/7 with relatively modest pay."

The press secretary's job is both high-pressure and high-profile. No argument there. But, Mr. President, $172,200 a year does not qualify in the United States in 2011 by any definition as "relatively modest pay."

The median household income in the country in the last year of Bill Clinton's presidency was $52,500.

Every year since then, the annual household income in the United States has been lower than it was 11 years ago. In 2009, median household income fell to $49,777 — the lowest it had been at any time in the preceding 13 years.

Last September in Richmond, Va., President Obama acknowledged the possibility that he might be out of touch with ordinary Americans: "When you're in Washington all the time ... sometimes you're in what's called a bubble." To a crowd in Albuquerque, N.M., he confided about the presidential residence that "it's a very nice house they provide me in Washington, but at times you do feel like you're in the bubble." He added, "I just need to get out a bit and have a chance to talk to folks."

And how. Between 2007 and 2009, according to the Economic Policy Institute's analysis of Federal Reserve numbers, the average American family's entire net worth shrank by 41 percent to just $62,200.

This time, the critics and the naysayers are right about my hometown of Washington. It truly turns out to be a different world "Inside the Beltway," where someone earning a handsome six-figure income with full and generous benefits can become an object of pity for whom his understanding neighbors ought to consider holding a benefit.

Would somebody please tell the president that Robert Gibbs' White House salary of $172,200 puts him above the 90th percentile of all earners in the United States. That is not "relatively modest." Anyone who thinks otherwise is sadly living in a bubble.

To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

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COPYRIGHT 2011 MARK SHIELDS


Comments

6 Comments | Post Comment
Mark - well put Sir.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Charles
Fri Jan 7, 2011 5:38 AM
Great article that gets right to the point of it: Most people are on an austerity budget and are demanding that the government follow suit.

But all that government green has affected administrative listening skills; they are distracted by neon dollar signs blinking at every mental corner.

We need to put the children's trillion dollar toys in the basement and make the kids do their homework.

Comment: #2
Posted by: Tom
Fri Jan 7, 2011 6:17 AM
Sir; I think Mr. Obama's divorce from reality began with the study of law... In the Middle Ages, a guy named Abalard tried to remind people that Jus, meaning justice was the Genus, and Lex, meaning law was a Species of it... The point being that if it is not just, it is not law...The first thing lawyers learn in the study of law is how distinct it is from justice, and that even up to the Supreme Court, Justice does not enter into the business of Justice, but law is decided according to the constitution... What if that flawed document is full of illegalities, one of which we fought a Civil War over, and none of which we can resist short of Civil War??? Law is the form of our enemy... They have mastered it to master us... Join the outlaws if you expect to be on the right side of reality... The law men and law makers clearly do not get it... Thanks.. Sweeney
Comment: #3
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sat Jan 8, 2011 6:31 AM
Mark as a long time fan, i can't even remember when it all started, but I do know that Robin McNeil was anchor and this upstart from Texas with the cockeyed grin was being groomed and every Friday there was this loud mouthed liberal taking on the world, but if you listened most of the time he made sense - all this has earned me the right to say Mark when you're right you're right and you're right. I guess this proves the case that it takes two years for an avowed Washington hater to become a beltway insider. Of all the things you can say about Bill Clinton is the good thing is that he didn't leave office rich - he got rich by manipulating the system he railed against - that alone is enough for many to hate him never mind his zipper problem but back to Obama it just might be that in addition to a silver tongue he has a tin ear?
Comment: #4
Posted by: Hugh L Nini, sr
Sat Jan 8, 2011 8:31 AM
SHTF America predicts that the people in power are going to keep tightening the screws on average American citizens until some citizens, angry and incensed, go off the deep end and start shooting Members of Congress; and not just one, but many, in a well orchestrated “domestic terror attack”. Dazed, the survivors will wonder what craziness could have provoked such an outrage! Gentlemen: look to your own souls when it happens. See the self serving, unsatiable greed, vanity, and self indulgent ways in which you govern.

Dated: November 29, 2010
Comment: #5
Posted by: Drake Pendragon
Mon Jan 10, 2011 8:41 PM
I am glad to hear that comment. Comment on this. Ohio's new Governor, John Kasich, raised his cabinets pay rates. They will now earn the same pay as President's Obama's cabinet. The top position got a pay increase of $47,000 - more than the median income of Ohio residents. You want to say it is a pretty hefty salary in Washington dealing with 50 states. How about the same salary to deal with one state? Write about that and say how you are outraged of that inflated pay rate for 1/50th of the job.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Carmen Thompson
Tue Jan 11, 2011 12:26 PM
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