Buying the presidency

Bad enough that a tyrant is destroying American democracy. Now an oligarch is trying to buy the presidency. 

Published February 18, 2020 6:00AM (EST)

Democratic presidential candidate, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg speaks about affordable housing during a campaign event where he received an endorsement from District of Columbia Mayor, Muriel Bowser, on January 30, 2020 in Washington, DC. The first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses will be held February 3. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
Democratic presidential candidate, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg speaks about affordable housing during a campaign event where he received an endorsement from District of Columbia Mayor, Muriel Bowser, on January 30, 2020 in Washington, DC. The first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses will be held February 3. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

This originally appeared on Robert Reich's blog.

Bad enough that a tyrant is destroying American democracy. Now an oligarch is trying to buy the presidency. 

Michael Bloomberg's net worth is over $60 billion. The yearly return on $60 billion is at least $2 billion – which is what Bloomberg says he'll pour into buying the highest office in the land

I'm not saying that great wealth should disqualify you from becoming president. America has had some talented and capable presidents who were enormously wealthy — Franklin D. Roosevelt, Teddy Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, for example. 

The problem lies at the nexus of wealth and power, where those with great wealth use it to gain great power. This is how oligarchy destroys democracy.

So far, Bloomberg spent over $380 million on campaign advertising. That's more than Hillary Clinton spent on advertising during her entire presidential run. It's multiples of what all other Democratic candidates have spent, including billionaire Tom Steyer.

Encouraged by the murky outcome from the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primaries, Bloomberg has doubled his spending on TV commercials in every market where he is currently advertising and is expanding his campaign's field staff to more than 2,000.

That's not the only way he's using his billions to co-opt the election. He's been endorsed by House Democrats and Democratic mayors who were the beneficiaries of his fortune during their campaigns. He's also paying social-media "influencers" with large followings to promote his campaign. 

His paid staff is already three times as large as Trump's, five times Joe Biden's. He's using his fortune to woo staffers away from other campaigns. 

Meanwhile, the Democratic National Committee is putting Bloomberg onto the debate stage by abandoning the individual-donor threshold that it used for the first eight debates, presumably because Bloomberg — the self-funded billionaire — doesn't take donations.

To participate in the Feb. 19 debate in Las Vegas, Democratic candidates need to show at least 10 percent support in four national polls. Bloomberg's wall-to-wall advertising makes that pretty much inevitable. He recently came in third place in a Morning Consult tracking poll, behind just Sanders and Biden. And he's in the top four in many Super Tuesday states

Bloomberg has some attractive policy ideas about gun control, the environment, and a more progressive tax. 

But he's also a champion of Wall Street. He fought against the reforms following the near meltdown of the Street in 2008. His personal fortune is every bit as opaque as Trump's. Through his dozen years as mayor of New York he refused to disclose his federal taxesEven as a candidate for president, he still hasn't given a date for their release.

And because he hasn't taken individual donations, hasn't appeared on the debate stage, and bases his entire campaign on TV advertising, he isn't being held accountable for his despicable record on race and criminal justice – the discriminatory stop-and-frisk policy he implemented when he was mayor, or his defense of red-lining. 

And, remember, he's trying to buy the presidency. 

The word "oligarchy" comes from the Greek word oligarkhes, meaning "few to rule or command." It refers to a government of and by a few exceedingly rich people.

Since 1980, the share of America's wealth owned by the richest four hundred Americans has quadrupled while the share owned by the entire bottom half of America has declined. 

The richest 130,000 families now own nearly as much as the bottom 90 percent — 117 million families — combinedThe three richest Americans own as much as the bottom halfMichael Bloomberg is the eighth richest

Big money inevitably engulfs politics, which is why a handful of extremely rich people like Bloomberg have more influence than any comparable group since the robber barons of the early 20th century. 

Unlike income or wealth, power is a zero-sum game. The more of it at the top, the less of it anywhere else. And as power and wealth have moved to the top, everyone else has become dis-empowered. Today the great divide is not between left and right. It's between democracy and oligarchy. 

Bloomberg is indubitably part of that oligarchy.

If the only way we can get rid of a sociopathic tyrant named Trump is with an oligarch named Bloomberg, we will be forced to choose the oligarch.

But let's hope it doesn't come to that. Oligarchy is better than tyranny. But neither is as good as democracy.


By Robert Reich

Robert B. Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center for Developing Economies. He served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the twentieth century. He has written 15 books, including the best sellers "Aftershock", "The Work of Nations," and"Beyond Outrage," and, his most recent, "The Common Good." He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning documentary, "Inequality For All." He's also co-creator of the Netflix original documentary "Saving Capitalism."

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