Obama and the Government Employees
By
Ed Lasky
AmericanThinker.com
Barack Obama may not have
learned much at Harvard regarding the Constitution, but he did learn in
Chicago how politics works: the Chicago way. Reward supporters, and keep the
bribery as opaque as possible. Chicago mores have been brought to Washington.
There has recently been a
flurry of critical columns examining the devastation done to our nation's
fiscal health by government workers. Our cities, states, and federal
government are in critical condition. Cities have begun declaring bankruptcy,
and states such as California and Illinois are tottering. The federal
government, which supplied a big chunk of stimulus dollars merely to keep
states on life support, is running massive deficits and accumulating debts
as far as the eye can see.
What caused the problems?
There are two sides of the
ledger responsible. Declining state tax receipts (considered "earnings" by
government) played a role (the receipts side). But the real scourge has been
on the expense side of the ledger: salaries and pension benefits given -- and
I do mean given -- to government workers.
Public-sector unions have
amassed great power to extract taxpayer dollars from politicians. Politicians
reward government workers with our dollars, and they in turn are rewarded at
election time by donations, free labor (phone banks, people who pass out
flyers), and votes.
"Fully one-third of the
'stimulus' money went to state and local governments -- an obvious payoff to
public employee unions that contributed so much to Democrats," as Michael
Barone
noted.
Barone
describes
the corruption at the core of this dealing:
Public-sector unionism is
a very different animal from private-sector unionism. It is not adversarial
but collusive. Public-sector unions strive to elect their management, which
in turn can extract money from taxpayers to increase wages and benefits --
and can promise pensions that future taxpayers will have to fund.
The results are plain to
see. States such as New York, New Jersey and California, where public-sector
unions are strong, now face enormous budget deficits and pension
liabilities. In such states, the public sector has become a parasite sucking
the life out of the private-sector economy.
Obama and the Democrats
have been well-rewarded for their patronage. Unions contributed up to 400
million dollars to Democrats in 2008 and engage in skullduggery to advance
their aims. The latest revelation: a
union-funded slush fund
secretly targeting GOP candidates through the use of money-laundering and
front groups. Unions have funded all sorts of political activity --
undoubtedly the major reason Obama, in one of his first acts as president,
ended union disclosure rules
requiring them to report how their members' dues were being spent. So much for
transparency.
This is one reason why the
recent Supreme Court decision leveling the playing field, allowing
corporations to exercise their First Amendment rights by contributing to
candidates, inflamed unions and President Obama. He violated precedent by
attacking the Supreme Court in his State of the Union address. Maybe the title
should be changed to State of the Unions.
Franklin Roosevelt, of all
people, was alert to the danger of this collusion between politicians and
unions. He maintained that "the process of collective bargaining, as usually
understood, cannot be transplanted into the public service." Yet it has been
transplanted; today, a majority of union workers for the first time work for
the government. And the government has brought good things to them.
Government work is one
sector of our economy that is booming (besides pawnshops and bankruptcy
lawyers). Rich Lowry
noted
the paradox: We suffer, and government workers prosper.
For most Americans, the
Great Recession has been an occasion to hold on for dear life. For public
employees, it's been an occasion to let the good times roll.
The percentage of
federal civil servants making more than $100,000 a year jumped from 14
percent to 19 percent during the first year and a half of the recession,
according to USA Today. At the beginning of the
downturn, the Transportation Department had one person making $170,000 or
more a year; now it has 1,690 making that.
The
New York Times reports that state and
local governments
have added a net 110,000 jobs since the beginning of the recession, while
the private sector has lost 6.9 million. The gap between total compensation
of public and private workers has only widened during the downturn,
according to USA Today. In 2008, benefits for
public employees grew at a rate three times that of private employees.
Nor does the boom look
likely to end anytime soon.
The President's new budget
can be symbolized by the old wartime poster: Uncle Sam Wants You. Until Barack
Obama came into office, the number of federal employees had held relatively
constant. But that was so 2008. That number jumped from 1.875 million in 2008
to 1.98 million in 2009, and it looks to jump a farther in 2010 -- a
14.5% leap
in two years. (And the boom is in federal agencies, not the military; hiring
at the IRS, EPA, and the Justice Department is a big portion of the increase.
Big Brother is getting bloated -- maybe we can get Michelle to work on this
obesity problem.)
Federal workers now earn,
in wages and benefits, about twice what their private sector equivalents get
paid. They often have Cadillac health plans and retirement benefits far
above the private sector average: 80 percent of public-sector workers have
pension benefits, only 50 percent in the private sector. Many can retire at
age 50.
The pensions are
manipulated upwards and gold-plated, too, as I noted in "Taxpayers:
Eat your hearts out, suckers."
Many others have begun to
notice
the drain on public finances by pensions for government workers, and the
public pension tsunami has just begun.
This is the engine driving
our ballooning deficits and public debt. Merely rolling federal employee pay
back to where it was in 1998 relative to the private sector and shifting state
and local government pay back to 2005 relative levels would save
$116 billion annually
from government costs.
We know this will never
happen as long as Democrats are in power. They like this perpetual motion
machine. A government bureau, Ronald Reagan
quipped,
is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on earth. But we can try,
and there is certainly potential for Republicans to seize on this problem as
it begins to gain traction in the public mind. The issue seems tailor-made for
Tea Partiers.
Meanwhile, Big Brother,
like many big brothers, has become a bully. The Internal Revenue Service is on
a hiring binge to crack down on taxpayers; fees on candy, plastic bags, iPod
downloads, sugar, and many other things that make life fun are going up and
up; our tax rates are inflating; and studies show that there has even been an
explosion in parking tickets and fines for every picayune sort of "violation"
that the bureaucrats can dream up in all their spare time -- phantom taxes,
they have been
called.
The leviathan must be fed.
The massive debt
accumulating will be our responsibility to pay in the decades ahead. Obama
blames Bush for the problems he inherited, but we know whom to blame for the
problems our children and grandchildren will inherit. This debt will be an
albatross around the neck of our economy. Our taxes will go toward these
pensions and debt repayment instead of investments that will help our economy
grow.
But even this good deal is
not good enough for Barack Obama. He is a very mischievous man whose Modus
Operandi is to distract and defame and engage in a great deal of sleight of
hand. If he truly is a "sort of God" (as one of his adoring
Newsweek pundits
characterized him),
that God would be Janus of two faces. While he talks the talk about the
deficit and freezing discretionary spending, Obama engages in a spending binge
that would make Imelda Marcos proud. But look what else the
Magician-in-Chief
is doing: giving even more
money and benefits to government workers, and doing it in a very
untransparent and sneaky way.
Barack Obama is planning a
major overhaul of the Federal government pay system that would boost pay for
government workers while loosening scrutiny on how they do their jobs.
When he released his
budget, there was a section titled "Improving the Federal Workforce." Sounds
good, right? But watch what the man and his minions do, not what they say.
First, the document tries
to justify the high salaries government workers are paid (responding to the
mounting criticism).
But then comes the
trickery, disguised as "reform" and "refreshing" the system. This team is
addicted to euphemisms (and their thesauruses are well-thumbed).
John Berry, director of the
Office of Personnel Management, is engaged in a major effort to overhaul the
G.S., or General Schedule, classification and pay system that began in 1949.
Change is coming, and it will gladden the hearts and fill the wallets of
government workers. In a Washington Post
interview,
Berry
mused about eliminating
the first two ranks of the 15-grade GS system and adding grades 16 and 17.
Berry did not explicitly advocate a pay raise for federal workers during the
interview, but those in the added grades presumably would be paid more than
the current top rate.
Berry made noises about
tying pay to performance (consider this chaff to deflect observation and
criticism), but then he tipped his hand:
"I'm a strong proponent
of breaking the chain to the desk and breaking the chain to the time clock,"
he said. He wants government to "move in a direction to empower and trust
our employees to get the job done ... and not focus so much on where they're
sitting and what hours they're sitting there."
Does that sound like a plan
to increase efficiency of government workers? Give them higher pay, but allow
them to set their own hours and work from...where? Starbucks? Home? The zoo?
And how is this "reform"
going to happen? Are the people or our representatives going to have a say in
how our money is spent? Need one ask?
The plans are in the final
stages and will be put in place by a presidential memorandum or executive
order. In other words, they'll be implemented by presidential fiat. This is
the form of government we have now -- or at least did, before Scott Brown was
elected.
Government work...our
growth industry.
Ed Lasky is news editor of
American Thinker.
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