Black
America vs. Obama?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: An
Establishment in Panic
"The Disappearing
Black Middle Class" ran the headline over the Chicago Sun-Times
story. And the statistics from the Economic Policy Institute were
indeed sobering.
In 2007, best
year of the Bush era, white households had a median net worth of
$134,280, compared with $13,450 for black households.
By 2009, the
median net worth for white households had fallen 24 percent to $97,860.
For black households, it had plummeted 83 percent to $2,170, a near
wipeout.
As Algernon
Austin of EPI's Program on Race, Ethnicity and the Economy put it,
"In 2009, for every dollar of wealth the average white household
had, black households had two cents."
One explanation
for this surely is the wave of foreclosures on subprime mortgages,
a large share of which were held by African-Americans.
But while unemployment
among white men has surged in the Great Recession, among black men
it has hit 16 percent, the highest level since the Department of
Labor began to keep records in 1972.
Ominously,
things are likely to get worse, because Bill Clinton's assertion,
"The era of big government is over!" is today palpably true.
Not only in
Wisconsin, Ohio and New Jersey, run by Republicans, is this so,
but in liberal mega-states like New York and California. There,
Govs. Andrew Cuomo and Jerry Brown run the show, and government
payrolls are also being slashed and government pensions pared back.
From Greece
to Portugal to Ireland to Italy, an age of austerity has begun.
And now that age is about to begin in Barack Obama's Washington.
Why should
this adversely affect black America?
Because not
only are African-Americans disproportionately the beneficiaries
of federal programs, from the Earned Income Tax Credit to aid for
education and student loans, they are even more over-represented
in the federal workforce than they are on state payrolls.
Though 10 percent
of the U.S. civilian labor force, African-Americans are 18 percent
of U.S. government workers. They are 25 percent of the employees
at Treasury and Veterans Affairs, 31 percent of the State Department,
37 percent of Department of Education employees and 38 percent of
Housing and Urban Development. They are 42 percent of the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission and Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp.,
55 percent of the employees at the Government Printing Office and
82 percent at the Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency.
When the Obama
administration suggested shutting down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
the mortgage giants whose losses of $150 billion have had to be
made up by taxpayers, The Washington Post warned, in a story headlined,
"Winding Down Fannie and Freddie Could Put Minority Careers at Risk,"
that 44 percent of Fannie employees and 50 percent of Freddie's
were persons of color.
In Washington,
D.C., we have also seen the result of government cuts on African-American
leaders who had to approve those cuts.
When Mayor
Adrian Fenty stood behind schools chancellor Michelle Rhee, who
fired hundreds of teachers, most of them African-American, the wards
east of the Anacostia cut him dead. In 2010, Fenty was thrown out
by many of the black voters who elected him.
Not only are
African-Americans over-represented among government employees, these
jobs are the backbone of the black middle class. For federal pay
and benefits have in recent years far outstripped those of the private
sector.
From 2000 to
2010, the number of federal employees earning over $150,000 increased
tenfold. That number doubled in the first two years alone of the
Obama administration. The average pay of federal civil servants
in 2009, after benefits were factored in, was $123,000, twice the
average pay and benefits of $61,000 in the private sector.
Indeed, because
of the salaries and benefits that District of Columbia and federal
employees receive, Washington is first among all metropolitan areas
in per-capita income. And the three congressional districts north
and west of the city in Maryland and Virginia are among the top
10 in the nation in average income.
The half-century
since the Great Society was launched in the mid-1960s have been
the salad days of the government sector. No segment of the population
has benefited more than black America.
But with the
U.S. government running its third deficit of 10 percent of gross
domestic product, and Obama talking of cutting $4 trillion from
future spending, those days are over. And as black America benefited
immensely from the Great Society, so it is likely to hurt most as
the cuts come.
Already,
black voices are beginning to blame the black president whom fate
has chosen to preside over the downsizing.
Obama, says
Princeton professor Cornell West, "lacks backbone." He is a "black
mascot of Wall Street and a black puppet of corporate plutocrats.
... I don't think in good conscience I could tell anybody to vote
for Barack Obama."
Incredibly,
the question must be asked.
Is this Democratic
administration about to go to war with its base? Is black America
souring on Barack Obama?
July
12, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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