Only
among Democrats, people with a postgraduate education and blacks do a majority
see anything hopeful.
To break
through all this resistance, the President is recruiting Bill Clinton’s former
chief of staff John Podesta, who has been in private life at the Center for
American Progress, a left-leaning public policy research group.
Even
before he joins the White House, Podesta lays out the Obama argument in Politico:
“Income
inequality in the United States today has reached levels last seen during the
Roaring ’20s. Over the last three decades, the top 1 percent of incomes have
risen by 279 percent, while the bottom fifth of workers have seen an increase
of less than 20 percent. In 1979, the middle 60 percent of households took home
50 percent of U.S. income. By 2007, their share was just 43 percent.
“These
trends have continued since the end of the Great Recession. Ninety-five percent
of income gains since 2009 have gone to the top 1 percent of earners. In 2012,
the top 10 percent took home more than 50 percent of the nation’s income—a
record high. After a brief period in the late 1990s during which incomes rose
across the board, median wages stagnated during the 2000s, and have remained
depressed during the economic recovery.”
The
President himself made the case for attacking income inequality, but it fell on
deaf ears.
What
will it take to get most Americans to listen to and understand what is in their
best interests for the future?
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