In the 1980s, Ronald Reagan repeated, again and again, a fabricated story of a welfare recipient regally arriving in a white Cadillac to pick up her monthly check. The facile fiction became a model for generations of Republicans lamenting a "culture of dependency."
In 2016, the GOP has shown a change of heart. This year, Republicans have nominated a welfare queen for president.
Over his storied career, Donald J. Trump has raked in $885 million in public handouts — "tax breaks, grants and other subsidies for luxury apartments, hotels and office buildings" — in New York alone, according to a recent report in the New York Times.
That figure doesn't include public subsidies pocketed by Trump in New Jersey, Illinois, Florida — and many countries across the world. Nor the millions Trump has saved on income taxes leaping through loopholes. His accountants are the best. Beautiful! Believe me.
If the alleged billionaire really is as rich as he claims (Show us your tax returns, Donald!), a substantial part of his wealth came at public expense. Trump is less self-made man than ward of the state.
Donald Trump Jr. recently said releasing his father's taxes would be "a distraction." Trump the Elder has created more than his share of distractions. Does he pay his fair share of taxes? He professes outrage at those who don't.
"They make a fortune. They pay no tax," Trump said of U.S. corporate executives last year. "It's ridiculous, OK?"
He should know. In 1978 and 1979, then-millionaire Donald Trump paid no income taxes, according to tax returns he turned over to New Jersey casino license officials, the Washington Post reported.