Spread The Wealth

Posted on October 16th, 2008 by Daniel Larison

There is an idea circulating out there that the killer combo of Joe the Plumber and “spread the wealth” may save the election for McCain.  Now you might say that this is just whistling past the graveyard, but that doesn’t do it credit.  This is really more like four-part harmony singing in a freshly-dug grave as the dirt is being piled on. 

This is something that I didn’t elaborate on last night, but the idea that the message of Spread The Wealth would be a political loser at the present time is bizarre, which makes McCain’s insistence on identifying Obama as the “spread the wealth” candidate even more bizarre.  I mean, does McCain want to get crushed in a landslide?  Let’s think about this.  There is an economic downturn coming on the heels of an era of wage stagnation and growing economic inequality, the financial sector has imploded thanks to the combined blunders of government and holders of concentrated wealth and Obama’s use of a phrase that on its own could easily be mistaken for an expression of neo-Harringtonian distributism is supposed to be politically radioactive?  Consolidation of power, concentration of wealth and centralism all stand condemned for having created the present fiasco, and there is supposed to be a political downside to talking about distributing wealth? 

Contra Pethokoukis, Long’s slogan was Share Our Wealth, which definitely had a more direct appeal to economic solidarity and redistribution than “spread the wealth” suggests.  In theory, a true believer in an unfettered market would hold that his economic model more equitably and efficiently creates and then spreads the wealth, but there is no disagreement that wealth can and should be ”spread around.”  McCain halfway hinted at this last night, but he had already tried to make the use of the phrase into something terrible.  Integral to a social vision of a broad middle class of property-holders is the idea that wealth is widely and more or less evenly distributed, and there is an assumption in this vision that this is best for political and social stability, as it prevents the sort of dangerous stratification that prevails in societies in which a wealthy oligarchy dominates a poor underclass.  If conservatives cede distributist language to left-liberals, they are not only abandoning an important part of their intellectual and political tradition, but they are also surrendering their ability to speak on behalf of middle-class Americans and they appear to be giving up on the idea that a relatively more free market system can better distribute wealth than a welfarist system organized by the central government.

Then again, the frequent attack on Obama’s redistributive policies* seems bizarre in the wake of the bailout that McCain also supported, which is very plainly a redistribution of our wealth to financial institutions.  The argument in its favor is supposed to be that we will all suffer if it is not done, but there is no question that it is ultimately redistributive.  No one who supported the bailout can credibly fling the label socialist as an insult or use “spread the wealth” as a bludgeon.  It is a clear act of the government using its power to take taxpayers’ dollars (or funds borrowed on public credit) and allocate it elsewhere.  Even though the bailout provokes at least a large plurality to strong opposition, both candidates supported it, so it is not clear that the bailout or talk of redistributive policies hurts one more than the other.

*Let’s also remember that this entire discussion is premised on the assumption that Obama would reduce taxes on most middle-class households, and the issue at stake is whether he should raise taxes on those with higher incomes.

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9 Responses to “Spread The Wealth”

  1. Your writing on this is quite excellent. I don’t understand - doesn’t McCain understand the voters are angry and are ripe for grand old class conflict. What does “spread the wealth” even prove? That Barack is a stealth socialist in the best of years past for a socialist to run? (perhaps its my millennial instincts kicking in but does “socialism” scare anyone anymore) We just had socialism for the rich with the bailout, vast inequality and concentration of power along with governmental abuses and great debt. McCain should be adopting Robin hood’s message by now but that is to assume too much of either McCain or his campaign.

  2. The accusation of “class warfare” to anyone who questions things like the Bush tax cut is a bit of clever political skullduggery. Pretty funny, though, coming from the party of corporate welfare queens.

  3. Rasmussen has some poll numbers out on the issue of taxes on those making 250,000 dollars and above.

    A plurality of voters (47%) say Barack Obama’s plan to raise taxes on those who earn over $250,000 a year is good for the troubled U.S. economy, even though 51% still believe that lower taxes are the best way to spur economic growth.

  4. Polls In Missouri where Obama leads 52-46.

    Fifty-one percent (51%) believe that raising taxes on those who earn more than $250,000 a year will be good for the economy. Thirty-one percent (31%) believe such a tax hike would hurt.

    . Link here.

  5. I’m surprised at the polling. Thanks nyx.

    I’m still somewhat surprised at the gullibility of people. So many take it at face value that “Joe” would have had or could have had a personal income of $250,000. People just don’t know how much money that is income-wise.

  6. I remember Mencius Moldbug arguing that Huey Long was a far-right reactionary. I disagreed.

  7. When I first heard McCain mention that Obama would “spread the wealth” in the last debate, I thought that he probably had intended to say it differently, but got a bit muddled between his internal ideological shorthand and his talking points.

    Imagine my surprise when he said again the next day that Obama intended to spread the wealth, as if that were a bad thing. I think he’s taken the “What’s the Matter With Kansas” premise far too seriously. Most people aren’t wealthy, and the sound of spreading around some of that wealth we’ve all heard about but never seen is bound to sound like a good idea, even in Kansas.

    I can’t help but feel McCain is quite divorced from reality if he thinks the phrase will discredit Obama.

  8. Our old friend Mencius has some unusual interpretations on occasion. In fairness to him, I believe Lukacs has also misread Long as an opponent of FDR coming from “the Right” because he was a populist. Being a populist somehow puts him on the right in this scheme despite his record.

  9. Since there is no one on the national scene right now who actually advocates free-market capitalism to call him on his BS, McCain can get away with his astoundingly hypocritical red-baiting. In the mainstream, traditional political and economic labels don’t accurately describe anything anymore, except exhumed caricatures of a bygone era.

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