ALG Editor’s Note: In the following oped featured on the Daily Caller, ALG Director of Research Don Todd uncovers the personal fiscal mismanagement of Michael Steele, Chairman of the Republican National Committee:
Michael Steele, Call Me Irresponsible
By Don Todd
According to public documents obtained by Americans for Limited Government (ALG), Michael Steele, Chairman of the Republican National Committee (RNC), is as fiscally irresponsible in his personal life as he has been in the management of the RNC. A rough estimate indicates that Steele is obligated to pay 117 percent of his take-home pay in mortgages and taxes on his $1.7 million home in Upper Marlboro, Maryland.
This is no ordinary home, but is a 6,440 square foot mansion with 6.5 bathrooms set on an almost four-acre lot.
On January 23, 2008 when Steele purchased the property, there was a mortgage recorded in the amount of $1,909,000. This was later converted to another mortgage on November 5, 2008. There is a first mortgage of $1,537,500 at 6.75 percent (5/1 ARM) and a second mortgage of $195,000 as of that date. This comes to a total of $1,732,500.
The monthly payment on the first mortgage is $9,972.20. The payment on the second would be around $1,200 for a total of around $11,236.20.
The current property tax assessment for this home is $17,468.76 per year, which comes to $1,455.73 a month. Adding the mortgage payments and tax payments suggests that the monthly liability for the house comes to around $12,691.93 (not to mention homeowner’s insurance and utilities.) So how much money would you need to make to pay for an estate of this magnitude? The short answer is a lot. The general rule for mortgage qualification is that your house payment plus property tax and insurance shouldn’t exceed 28 percent of your gross income. Using the 28 percent figure, a person would need a gross annual income of approximately $544,000 to qualify for this type of loan ($544,000* .28 /12 = $12,693.33).
As of 2009, Steele’s salary at the RNC was $223,500 a year.
His listed salary disbursements in the last three months of RNC reports to the FEC are as follows:
Steele’s Take-Home Pay
6/30/2010 $5,634.55
6/15/2010 $5,414.48
5/28/2010 $5,380.16
5/14/2010 $5,414.48
4/30/2010 $5,380.17
4/15/2010 $5,414.48
This is an average of $10,879.44 a month. So how does Steele, who only takes home $10,879. 48 a month, make a monthly house payment of at least $12,691.93? Clearly he can’t afford the mortgage on this house with his normal RNC salary.
Late last year, reports surfaced that Chairman Steele had engaged in the unusual practice of making paid speeches and asking between $8,000 and $20,000 plus first-class travel and accommodations to do so. Steele was criticized at the time for “taking time out to speak for the benefit of one’s own bank account,” a practice called “not appropriate.” Given the massive personal debt that Chairman Steele has racked up his practice makes perfect sense. His lack of personal fiscal restraint has made it impossible for him to be a full time Chairman because his house payment alone consumes all of his take-home pay from the RNC.
Other records give no indication of additional sources of sizable family income. Mr. Steele’s book, “Right Now: A 12-Step Program For Defeating The Obama Agenda,” was published by Regnery, a publisher where large advances are not likely. The book is currently listed on Amazon as its 495,199th best seller, meaning nearly half a million books in their inventory are selling better than his tome.
In recent days RNC Treasurer Randy Pullen claimed that Chairman Steele had concealed large amounts of debt from him and the public. Hiding this amount, over $7 million, made the cash-on-hand situation of the RNC appear much better than it actually was.
This is not the first time that Chairman Steele and the RNC have been accused of financial improprieties. Earlier this year the RNC reimbursed an individual for almost $2,300 for expenses incurred at a sex-themed club in West Hollywood named Voyeur. Last year the RNC’s finance reports revealed that the RNC had spent almost $22,000 on an interior decorator, $18,500 of which was for “improvements to the chairman’s office.” Why did the Chairman’s office need to be redecorated? Apparently, among other things, Steele thought it was “way too male for me.”
So it appears that the Chairman is just as bad at managing the finances of the RNC as he is at managing his personal finances. And this isn’t the first time that Steele has made personal financial decisions that raise questions either. In 2001, foreclosure proceedings were begun against Steele on another house he owned (Burson v. Steele, No. CAE01-13753, Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, 2001). In 2002, another civil action was filed against Steele seeking $11,846.88. That case was voluntarily dismissed later (Citibank South Dakota NA v. Steele, No. 050200362982002, District Court for Prince George’s County, 2002).
All of this reveals a pattern of financial mismanagement going back many years. Either Steele is living beyond his means or cannot keep his accounts in order, or both, and he seems to have infected the RNC with these bad fiscal habits. These are not sought after qualities for the head of the National Committee of the party of fiscal discipline. It’s time for Steele to move on and let someone who can handle finances step into the job.
Don Todd is Director of Research for Americans for Limited Government. He previously served as Director of Research for the Republican National Committee under Chairman Frank J. Fahrenkoph, Jr., Chairman Lee Atwater, and Chairman Haley Barbour.