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Economic downturn took a detour at Capitol Hill
There's lots more at the link...and before you start hollering that this just to bash on Democrats think again. It talks about some Republican members also.
Anyways...discuss.
WASHINGTON — When Representative Ed Pastor was first elected to Congress two decades ago, he was comfortably ensconced in the middle class. Mr. Pastor, a Democrat from Arizona, held $100,000 or so in savings accounts in the mid-1990s and had a retirement pension, but like many Americans, he also owed the banks nearly as much in loans.
Today, Mr. Pastor, a miner’s son and a former high school teacher, is a member of a not-so-exclusive club: Capitol Hill millionaires. That group has grown in recent years to include nearly half of all members of Congress — 250 in all — and the wealth gap between lawmakers and their constituents appears to be growing quickly, even as Congress debates unemployment benefits, possible cuts in food stamps and a “millionaire’s tax.”
There's lots more at the link...and before you start hollering that this just to bash on Democrats think again. It talks about some Republican members also.
Anyways...discuss.