Updates when new 11 Points go live, plus exclusives, contests & more! (And no spam EVER.)
E-mail address:
Archive
Popular
Random
About
Contact
Mail List
Facebook
Twitter
RSS
11 Interesting Facts About Our Presidents and Their Money
Posted Thursday, October 16, 2008 at 12:00:00 PM
I read yesterday that this year's U.S. presidential campaign is going to cost an estimated $1.2 billion, which is an all-time record.
President is not a particularly well-paid job. Whomever wins this $1.2 billion campaign will have won himself a $400,000-a-year job.
(Yes, I know the perks that come with being president are worth immeasurably more than that. But we're talking straight salary here. Just because you swipe 15 boxes of paper clips from your office's supply closet this year doesn't mean suddenly your salary is $42,007.50. It's still $42,000, with perks. Those boxes of paper clips are your equivalent of Camp David, Air Force One and presidents of former Soviet republics sending caviar every Christmas.)
I thought it'd be a good time to look at some presidents and their money before, during, and after their presidencies.
Fool me once and make it rain.
Highest paid president.
This one's easy: It's your current president, fiddling Nero himself,
George W. Bush
. As of 2001, the annual salary of the president jumped from $200,000-a-year to $400,000-a-year.
Bush also gets a $50,000 expense account, a $100,000 travel account and $19,000 for entertainment.
Highest paid president (inflation adjusted).
You'd never guess this one: It's
William Howard Taft
. When he was inaugurated in 1909, the presidential salary jumped from $50,000 to $75,000. In today's dollars, that's a salary equivalent to $1.7 million a year, making him easily the highest-paid president in U.S. history.
Which is good, because his personal gravy budget had to be in the five-figure range.
Lowest paid president.
The first U.S. Congress voted to give
George Washington
a salary of $25,000 per year. He turned it down, because he was already rolling in cash, and asked for a salary of zero dollars.
Which easily makes him the lowest-paid president in U.S. history. (And we can call this yet another story where George Washington comes off as a better human being than anyone could ever
really
be. Seriously. If Jesus met Washington, he'd tells him to tone down the selflessness.)
Lowest paid president (inflation adjusted).
This one goes to
Bill Clinton
, the final president to make $200,000-a-year. The presidential salary was $200k from 1969 until 2001. Inflation adjusted, that means, in his final year, Clinton made about $230,000 in today's dollars. That's easily the least of any president.
Highest paid vice president.
He really doesn't need it, since his time as vice president has allowed him to use his power to become disgustingly richer... but, yeah, it's
Dick Cheney
. In 2003, the vice presidential salary jumped to $198,600, its highest level to date.
The VP salary has always floated somewhere below the presidential salary... the closest it ever came was in 1994, when Clinton got $200,000 and Gore got $171,000... the furthest was in 1909, when Taft made $75,000 and his VP, James Sherman, made $12,000, or 84 percent less.
If he was walking down the street wearing a shirt that said "I'm James Sherman", you still wouldn't recognize him.
Highest paid vice president (inflation adjusted).
Surprise. It's also
James Sherman
here.
Even though he was making so, so much less than Taft, the $12,000 he made in 1909 adjusts to about $275,000 in today's dollars, which is a vice presidential record.
Richest president, entering office.
There's a long debate about this on Forbes, since the data isn't all out there. They believe it's George Washington (who came from a super-wealthy plantation-owning family... and yes, they owned slaves... I KNEW Washington would screw up eventually).
It could also be John F. Kennedy, Andrew Jackson or Lyndon Johnson.
All of them came from a ton of money when they took the job.
Poorest president, leaving office.
When
Harry Truman
left office, he was completely broke. In fact, Congress was so worried that they started the presidential pension system just so he could have some money.
The pension system is now worth a ton... Bush will get almost $200,000 a year for the rest of his life, not even counting the cost of Secret Service or anything else government-funded.
Most independently wealthy first lady.
It would've been Teresa Heinz Kerry, who's worth $750 million. (From Heinz. The ketchup people. And, in my opinion, that's totally cool. If anyone deserves to have a fortune, it's the person behind the greatest condiment in the history of mankind. I've probably contributed close to 1/750th of that to her in all the ketchup I've plowed through in the past 29 years.)
And it could be Cindy McCain, whose net worth from her family business is reported somewhere around $100 million.
As for who it was before, it's believed it was
Martha Washington
, who came from an extremely wealthy plantation family.
(Side fact I found while researching this: Before she married George, she married another dude, Daniel Parke Curtis. She was 18, he was 38. They had four kids. He died less than 10 years later... everyone died real young back then... and she married George the next year. They had no kids together.)
Highest paid confederate president.
Well, since there was only one, it's
Jefferson Davis
, by default. It took me forever to find out how much he was paid, but I tracked it down in the book "Jefferson Davis", which is a collection of his letters. On
page 171
he says half a year's salary is $12,500, so I'm assuming he made $25,000, the same as Lincoln was making up north.
Of course, Jefferson Davis was paid in confederate money, so, in reality, he made zero dollars.
It's like in "Street Fighter", how all of M. Bison's guys get pissed when they realize he didn't pay them in actual money, but in the currency he created in anticipation of ruling the world. Zangief is particularly upset by this turn of events... not because of M. Bison's confederate money, but because he wasn't even getting paid.
President I believe was the cheapest.
After much deliberation, I am going to say that
Dwight Eisenhower
was the cheapest president. Here are my reasons. (1) His formative years were during the Great Depression. (2) According to his bio, his military work was all low paid compared to his friends who took business jobs, so he definitely knew the value of a dollar. (3) Of all the presidents with Depression roots, he was the oldest when he was in office, and old people are cheap.
I rest my case.
Link to this list:
StumbleUpon
View Comments
Digg
Win free Golden Grahams
11 Terms That Are Too Cute For What They Actually Mean
11 Secret Endings in our Election 08 Choose Your Own Adventure Video
11 Parodies I Made of the Obama Hope Poster
11 Very Strange Ways China's Preparing to Host the Olympics
11 Best Hand Gestures of the Bush Presidency
Check out all of the 11Points
News-Politics
lists
View the discussion thread.
blog comments powered by
Disqus
11 Funny Graphs About Twitter
Friday, March 19, 2010 at 10:30:00 AM
11 Points Inbox-O-Rama, Number 12
Thursday, March 18, 2010 at 06:15:00 AM
11 Deeply Existential Signs and Billboards
Monday, March 15, 2010 at 06:30:00 AM
11 Greatest Parodies Of We Are The World
Friday, March 12, 2010 at 10:45:00 AM
11 Sexual Activities That People Don't Count As 'Having Sex'
Wednesday, March 10, 2010 at 11:00:00 AM
11 Reminders From the 2010 Oscars That Everyone's Career Starts Off Suckin'
Monday, March 8, 2010 at 05:30:00 AM
Full Archive
Web & Tech
Misc
Music
Dating & Sex
Movies
Sports
Personal
Travel
NFL Picks
Food & Drink
Interviews
Books
TV
Games
News & Politics
View Full Archive
advertisement
Angie Greenup
blogarama.com
Bro Bible
Comedy.com
Cracked.com
Don Chavez
Gorilla Mask
Jared's Cube
John Stone
Morning, Wood
Neatorama
Newser
OMG Blog
Panda Smash
Patrick Stack
Paul's Pond
Reality Blurred
Regretful Morning
Ritu B Pant
Smarty Panties
The Complete Sheet
Underworld Mag
Wine and Gold Rush
advertisement
Copyright 2008 - 2009
Privacy policy