Liberals love to tell the rest of us what to do, but politicians implicitly admit the unreasonableness of their own demands by exempting themselves from them
American liberals trumpet a “wage gap” between men and women,
notwithstanding reams of social science data demonstrating that men’s
higher average earnings reflect life choices, not discrimination. White
House salaries are published, so analysts have shown that Barack Obama’s
own staff manifests the same “pay gap” that Obama and Hillary Clinton
decry in private industry. Democrats have no response; as usual, they
count on voter ignorance.
It is entertaining to see the same drama play out in the United Kingdom: “Jeremy Corbyn accused of hypocrisy for refusing to publish gender pay gap of Labour staff.”
Thus writes Powerline's
John Hinderaker (cheers to
Austin Bay).
Politicians love to impose burdens, sometimes impossible burdens, on
others, especially business people, but they are much more understanding
when it comes to their own conduct. In 1994, Newt Gingrich and his
colleagues drafted a Contract With America, a key provision of which was
that Congress should live by the same laws it imposes on the rest of
us. That proposal was wildly popular, given that Congress had made a
regular practice of inserting an exception for itself in legislation.
The basic issue hasn’t changed: liberals love to tell the rest of us
what to do, but politicians implicitly admit the unreasonableness of
their own demands by exempting themselves from them. (If you haven’t
read Peter Schweizer’s Do As I Say (Not As I Do), you should.) This whole phenomenon is an important reason for the rise of Donald Trump.