Prince Charlie and the people
One of the chief Tea Party concerns over the past 20 months has been the sense that government has become a separate class with interests separate from those of the people. Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., personifies this problem.
The U.S. House of Representatives recently censured Rangel—the former chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee responsible for writing tax legislation—for unethical behavior involving, among other things, failing to report taxable income. This scandal brought to public attention the sharp contrast between the man and the people he represents. In many ways, life has been very kind to Charlie Rangel . . . generously kind. But it turns out that Rangel has used his position to be generously kind to himself.
Rangel represents New York’s 15th Congressional District, which includes Harlem, but also Columbia University and the upscale Morningside Heights. But taken as a whole, the district has not been doing nearly as well as the congressman representing it. This is strange given that Rangel is one of the most powerful men in Washington. The median annual income for his district is just under $28,000, which does not go far in New York City. Rangel, by contrast, has a net worth of between $1 million and $2.5 million, depending on how you count, I suppose. For example, unlike most of his neighbors, he owns a villa in the Dominican Republic from which he made $75,000 in unreported rental income.
A comparable situation can arise in the pastoral ministry, and the comparison is instructive. If a pastor serving a poor church in a poor neighborhood were to draw a salary significantly beyond what anyone else in the church were making and lived in a swank neighborhood on the other side of town, though the church for whatever reason might be fine with that and perhaps even proud of it, the incongruity would rightly trouble the impartial observer. A pastor should stand with his people, suffering what they suffer, prospering as they prosper. If nothing else, he cannot serve them faithfully if he cannot sympathize with them.
The same is true of the people’s political servants. If most people in a district live in public housing, their representative should also live in public housing. If most people in a district are served by appallingly bad public schools, their representative should have his or her children (if there are any) in those same schools. Finding this unacceptable, congressmen would soon start supporting effective ways for opening up economic opportunities for their neighbors to better themselves. Otherwise, politicians have that much less incentive to do what they legitimately can to improve their people’s overall quality of life. They become, one might say, political farmers instead of political representatives, bilking the people instead of benefiting them, standing on their backs rather than “having their backs,” as we say.
Of course, this equality of condition is something we should simply expect from those who govern us, except in statewide and national offices. It cannot be imposed by law. We can’t legally require anyone to live in a particular place or use a particular form of schooling. Tying congressional salaries to local median incomes would not prevent elected representatives from securing outside sources of income or even bringing previously earned or inherited wealth to the office. Although, given what many congressmen will do to line their pockets at the public expense even in surprisingly trivial ways, district-determined salary caps might be effective incentive for a more sincere public service.

















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back to top12 Comments to “Prince Charlie and the people”
They SCOLDED Rangel for NOT reporting and NOT paying his taxes.
Did anyone wonder, AT ALL, WHERE Rangel got the expensive villa and building?
Are they going to make him pay his back taxes?
When did DC become exempt from the law?
When DEMS talk about “RICH” people getting too many TAX BREAKS, they are NEVER talking about their rich and large corporate friends and benefactors.
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A couple of pastors we had lived in expensive housing far away from our church.
It would bother me when one pastor talked about living on a lake and having an expensive house and boat.
The other pastor drove a fast red car.
Churches went from not paying PASTORS enough and working them too hard, to paying WAY TOO MUCH and hiring extra staff to take ALL their other duties.
And because they lived so far from the church, they showed up less and less for church activities. And next thing you know all we had was Sunday morning church service.
I feel PASTORS should live in or near their church community and receive modest pay–especially if all you will be doing is preaching on Sunday morning.
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Common sense cannot be legislated. Which is more nonsensical: Rangel exploiting his position for personal gain all the while representing a relatively poor district or his constituents continually re-electing him in spite of his misdeeds? My personal feeling is that this is reparations, Rangel style, and many in his district probably approve of it.
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How about we return to the model for the Church that the Apostle Paul laid out, throwing out the idea of one man doing everything but also eliminating the need for him to be compensated with some of the congregation’s tithes?
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How about term limits? That would effectively end the creation and maintenance of an American Ruling Class. This would restore us to a county governed by ordinary citizen representatives. Didn’t we fight the American Revolution (in part) to end the tyranny of the Nobility?
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Good leaders know when its time for them to step down. They actively recruit and groom likely successors or at least identify folks whom they’d like to see succeed them.
I think Rangel and most DC careerists dont do that. Dittos for the careerists in my home state legislature (Tx).
In Rangel’s case did he bring back pork for his district in the same manner Robert K Byrd has done for West Va??
Rangel isnt the first nor will he be the last DC pol to go their of modest or even poor means and leave rich. And when he is booted out as he eventually will be we hope, concha know he will be right back as a lobbyist?
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Nobility a/k/a elitists. Yes, we did fight a revolution. I’m with you.
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Rom116. No kings, no dictators.
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Motto of the Revolution: No king but Jesus.
I blame our federal representatives for being elitist, but I think a good share of the blame also must be given to the majority of American voters who re-elect men and women like Charles Rangel term after term, because the longer their rep. is “in” the more powerful their rep. becomes, gaining seats and chairmanships on committees, and often bringing big pork home for those voters.
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RepresentativeCharles Rangel, D-N.Y. represents RepresentativeCharles Rangel, D-N.Y.
Any other questions?
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#5 Cactigal if we had a “like” button on here I’d click it under your post!
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D.C. – I’m surprised that noone has slapped you because of the Pastor example. In an age of guidestar.org it is very easy to see the salaries of those who are in “ministry”. A $400,000 – $500,000 salary could ship many shoeboxes at $7 each.
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