Letters from an American - November 25, 2024
Episode Date: November 26, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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November 25, 2024. Today, President Joe Biden laid out very clearly the argument behind the
economic policies his administration has put into place.
When I took office, the pandemic was raging and the economy was reeling," he wrote. From day one, I was determined to not only deliver economic relief,
but to invest in America and grow the economy from the middle out and bottom up, not the top down.
Over the last four years, that's exactly what we've done," he wrote.
We passed legislation to rebuild our infrastructure, build a clean energy economy, and bring manufacturing
back to the United States after decades of offshoring.
Investing in America included the bipartisan infrastructure law that is rebuilding our
roads, bridges, water systems, ports and airports, as well as making high-speed broadband available
in underserved areas,
the Chips and Science Act that invested
in bringing the manufacture of silicon chips
back to the U.S. and promoting research,
and the Inflation Reduction Act,
which invested in technologies to combat climate change.
Today, the White House announced
that this federal investment has attracted
more than
$1 trillion in private sector investments.
These investments in industries of the future, Biden wrote, are ensuring the future is made
in America by American workers.
He noted that more than 1.6 million construction and manufacturing jobs have been created over
the last four years,
and that our investments are making America a leader in clean energy and semiconductor
technologies that will protect our economic and national security while expanding opportunities
in red states and blue states.
In a White House memo, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Natalie Quillian wrote,
The progress we've made represents only a fraction of the full impact of this agenda.
If future administrations continue to implement at the pace we have,
people across the country will enjoy the benefits of safer water, cleaner air, faster internet, and smoother commutes.
But the incoming Trump administration will advance a different economic vision.
Instead of trying to expand the economy through investment in infrastructure and manufacturing,
Trump's team has emphasized cutting taxes for the wealthy and corporations and slashing regulations.
The argument behind this approach to the economy is that concentrating wealth in the hands
of investors will spur more investment, while creating an environment that's friendly to
business will create jobs.
Jack Brook of the Associated Press reported that earlier this month, the state of Louisiana
illustrated what this policy looks like to ordinary people when it cut income taxes to a flat 3% rate, reducing revenue by about
$1.3 billion.
The legislature made up that revenue by increasing the sales tax to 5%, thus shifting the burden
of taxation to lower and middle class families.
Louisiana just became a much more attractive place to do business,
Louisiana Economic Development Secretary Susan Bourgeois told Brooke.
It is becoming clear what Trump's economic policy will look like at the national level.
Super wealthy donors funded Trump's 2024 campaign,
and in a departure from every previous incoming president,
Trump is refusing to sign the documents required
as part of a presidential transition,
at least in part because those documents mandate
that he disclose who is funding his transition
and limit those donations to $5,000 per donor.
Without that disclosure, it is impossible to see who is funding him.
For all we know, that list could include foreign governments.
As activist Melanie DiRigio put it on Blue Sky, secret donations are bribes.
The hundreds of millions he received from Elon Musk and other billionaires are also
bribes.
There's a reason Donald Trump isn't signing ethics pledges.
Indeed, after his first term, the watchdog organization Citizens for Responsibility and
Ethics in Washington concluded that,
"...there is absolutely no doubt that Trump tried at every turn to use the presidency
to benefit his bottom line,
and noted that those who spent money at Trump's properties often received favorable policy
decisions from the administration.
During the campaign, Trump promised to fight for ordinary Americans, but many of Trump's
picks to fill offices in his administration are notable for their extreme wealth.
His pick for Treasury Secretary is billionaire Scott Besant, a hedge fund executive who invested
money for philanthropist George Soros for more than 10 years.
To head the Commerce Department, Trump has tapped billionaire Howard Lutnick, the chief
executive officer of financial giant Cantor Fitzgerald. Trump's choice for education secretary, Linda McMahon, and his choice for interior secretary,
North Dakota Doug Burgum, are both billionaires.
And then there are the two men Trump tapped for his Department of Government efficiency.
Former pharmaceutical executive Vivek Ramaswamy is worth around a billion dollars, but Elon
Musk is usually at the top of the list of the richest people in the world. Pharmaceutical executive Vivek Ramaswamy is worth around a billion dollars, but Elon Musk
is usually at the top of the list of the richest people in the world.
He's worth about $332.6 billion.
Laura Manweiler of U.S. News & World Report today estimated the worth of Trump's current
roster of appointees to be at least $344.4 billion, more than the gross domestic product of 169 countries.
That number does not include Besant, whose net worth is hard to find.
In comparison, Manweiler notes, the total net worth of the officials in Biden's cabinet was
about $118 million. Economist Robert Reich noted yesterday
that the wealth of America's 815 billionaires
grew by nearly $280 billion after Trump's reelection,
and the president-elect is promising
to extend the 2017 tax cuts that are set to expire in 2025.
Now, after all their complaints
about the budget deficits under Biden
as he invested in the country,
Republicans are, according to Andrew Duran
of the New York Times,
considering rejiggering the government's accounting
so that extending the tax cuts,
which will create about $4 trillion in deficits,
shows up as not costing anything.
Deregulation, too, is on the agenda.
It's a cause close to the heart of Elon Musk,
who frequently complains that unnecessary regulations
are making it impossible for visionary entrepreneurs
to develop the technological sector
as quickly and efficiently as they could otherwise.
In The Wall Street Journal yesterday,
Susan Pulliam, Emily Glazer, and Becky Peterson
noted that although Musk says his goal
is to protect life on Earth,
his companies show a pattern of breaking environmental rules
again and again.
The authors report that Tesla's facility
in Fremont, California
has received more warnings for violations of air pollution rules over the past five years
than almost any other company's plant in California, 112 of them. Federal regulators recently find
SpaceX for dumping about 262,000 gallons of wastewater into protected wetlands in Texas.
Tesla, too, has dumped contaminated water into public sewer systems.
One staffer for environmental compliance told the Environmental Protection Agency that
Tesla repeatedly asked me to lie to the government so that they could operate without paying for proper environmental controls.
People who have worked with Musk for years told Pulliam, Glazer, and Peterson that they
expect Musk will try to cut environmental regulations, especially the ones that affect
his companies.
After Trump announced that he was creating doggy and put Musk in charge of it, Musk posted, �We finally have a mandate to delete the mountain of choking regulations that do not
serve the greater good.�
Musk�s companies have brought in at least $15.4 billion in federal contracts over the
past decade, and his companies have been targeted in at least 20 government investigations recently.
Eric Lipton, David A. Ferenhold, Aaron Krohlich, and Kristin Grind of the New York Times note that
Trump's victory and his appointment of Musk to an oversight role in the government essentially
gives the world's richest man and a major government contractor the power to regulate
the regulators who hold sway over his companies,
amounting to a potentially enormous conflict of interest.
Today, Sarah Murray, Kristin Holmes,
and Kate Sullivan of CNN reported that Trump's lawyers
have conducted an investigation
into whether top Trump advisor Boris Epstein
has been selling access to Trump.
Payments for his promotion of candidates for administration positions or access to administration
officials were as much as $100,000 a month. The lawyers recommended that the Trump team
should jettison Epstein, but it is apparently decided not to.
I am honored to work for President Trump and with his team," Epstein said in a statement
to CNN.
These fake claims are false and defamatory and will not distract us from making America
great again.
Today special prosecutor Jack Smith moved to drop both federal cases against Trump.
The federal election case for his attempt
to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, and the case concerning Trump's
retention of highly classified documents after he left office in 2021.
Trump had said he would break the usual norms around special councils when he returns to
office, Biden retained the special counsel investigating his son Hunter, and fire Smith. But Smith pointed to the
position of the Department of Justice that a sitting president cannot be
prosecuted as a reason for the case's dismissal. This outcome is not based on
the merits or strength of the case against the defendant, he wrote. The
government's position on the merits of the of the case against the defendant, he wrote. The government's position on the merits
of the defendant's prosecution has not changed.
Smith left open the possibility
that the charges could be brought again in the future
after Trump leaves office.
Trump's approach to the cases was to delay and delay
and delay in hopes voters would return him
to the White House, and it
appears his strategy worked. As democracy lawyer Mark Elias wrote, justice delayed was justice denied.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.