Economic class and the 2012 Presidential election

Below are two sets of data about

– the income and wealth of the major candidates for the 2012 election compared to the median income and median wealth of the U.S. population

– the class basis of contributions in U.S. elections from 2000 through 2008

Prompt: Using these data sets, what interpretations can plausibly be formed regarding the relationship between economic class and the 2012 Presidential election? What are the implications of the data for the two major theories (pluralist, class domination) of political

power? Your essay should draw upon lecture and readings in the course books; the length should be no less than one page and no more than two. Your homework is due Wednesday, May 28 by 11pm via the course EEE dropbox and turnitin.

1.) Candidates, income, wealth:

The candidates Income (2011) Wealth (range)

Barack Obama $ 844,585 $ 2.8-11.8 million

Joe Biden (VP) $ 379,000 $ 59,000-360,000

Mitt Romney $20,901,075 $ 190-250 million

Paul Ryan (VP) $ 323,416 $ 7.6 million

Obama’s income 2008: $2.7 million

Obama’s income 2009: $5.5 million

Obama’s income 2010: $1.7 million

Obama’s income 2011: $ 844,585

Four year (2008-2011) average: $2.6 million

U.S. median household income (2010): $ 49,445

U.S. median household wealth (2007): $102,500

2.) Class basis of financial contributions to all candidates in U.S. elections

from 2000 through 2008:

Corporate (capitalist class): 72 -75% of all contributions

Labor (working class): 3 – 7% of all contributions

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