• 4 months ago
If the past is precedent, the vice president will be able to cash in on the 2024 election whether she ends up as commander-in-chief or not.

Read the full story on Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/kylemullins/2024/07/25/win-or-lose-this-election-will-be-lucrative-for-kamala-harris/

0:00 Introduction
0:08 Kamala Harris' Worth
2:34 Kamala's Husband Worth And Background
4:29 Could Kamala Harris Be The Next President Of the United States?

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Transcript
00:00Hi, everybody. I'm Brittany Lewis, a breaking news reporter here at Forbes. Joining me now
00:07is my Forbes colleague, money and politics reporter Kyle Kahn Mullins. Kyle, thanks for
00:11coming on once again. Always great to be here, Brittany. Thanks for having me. It has been
00:17a really hectic week in the political news world. On Sunday, as we know, President Biden
00:23did drop out of the 2024 race. Within days, Vice President Kamala Harris has become the
00:29likely Democratic nominee. And you're reporting that although the polls are very close on
00:35between her and Trump, win or lose, the election will be lucrative for Kamala Harris. So first,
00:41to start off the conversation, what is her net worth?
00:45The Forbes is estimating that Kamala Harris, along with her husband, Doug Emhoff, is worth
00:49about $8 million. That is up from $7 million in 2021. So it's grown a little bit over time.
00:55And that's mostly due to an increase in the value of her home in Los Angeles.
01:00So you've reported this interesting fact. In the short term, she'll actually make out
01:04better if she loses. That's obviously she'll make out better financially if she loses.
01:09How so?
01:11So we should caveat this whole conversation with Kamala Harris isn't making decisions
01:15about whether or not to run for president and run for office with her bank account in
01:20mind. We can pretty safely assume that. But with all of that said, I think it's important
01:26in order to answer this question, will she make out better if she wins or loses?
01:29Let's look at previous vice presidents. Start with Mike Pence, who, of course, lost the 2020
01:33election. He was able to quadruple his net worth in just a couple of years after he left office
01:41from about a million dollars to about $4 million. And Joe Biden, another good example,
01:45he chose not to run in 2016. And between then and when he ended up running in 2019, 2020,
01:52he and his wife, Jill, raked in $17 million of income. They increased their net worth from about
01:58$2.5 million to $8 million. Oh, just in a couple of years. What does all that tell you? It tells
02:04you that they can make a lot of money on the speaking circuit, writing memoirs. Mike Pence
02:09did some consulting as well. Joe Biden did some teaching. These are very plush, tried and true
02:16gigs for ex-politicians. So in the short term, Vice President Harris could lean into these
02:22methods and make out pretty well. So let's still go on with the hypothetical. She does
02:28lose. How would her husband's second gentleman, Doug Emhoff, contribute to the fortune here?
02:34Yeah, I think Doug Emhoff is the other really big piece of the equation here because
02:39Mike Pence's wife and Jill Biden were not enormous contributors to their fortunes. Doug Emhoff was
02:45actually the breadwinner and has been throughout their relationship until now. Doug Emhoff, before
02:51Kamala Harris became Vice President, when she was still a senator from California,
02:54he was an entertainment lawyer in Los Angeles at private practice. He was making over a million
02:58dollars a year. He was making a significant fortune. And so if she were to lose and were
03:05to be put back into private life, Doug Emhoff could go back to working that much sooner. It's
03:10kind of an opportunity cost question. And so whereas right now he's teaching at Georgetown
03:16and he's doing all of his duties as the second gentleman, that's a lot less lucrative than
03:24being an entertainment lawyer in private practice. So now let's go out down the other hypothetical
03:30road here. She does win. She gets inaugurated in January. What are some of those monetary perks
03:35of being commander in chief? Sure. So let's start with the obvious. You get a taxpayer funded
03:41mansion to live in rent free, the White House. You also get a fifty thousand dollar expense allowance
03:46for things that are related to you doing your duties as president. And she would get a salary
03:51bump. She currently makes about two hundred thirty five thousand dollars as vice president. She'd get
03:54a bump to four hundred thousand dollars, you know, a year. Additionally, she also gains access to a
04:01pension, presidential pension, which is significantly more generous than the pension
04:05that is available to the vice president. So she would that Forbes estimates that that pension,
04:11which would pay her the salary of a cabinet secretary for the rest of her life,
04:16it would be worth about one point seven million dollars if she only served one term as president.
04:20And it would be worth about one point one million dollars if she served two terms as president.
04:24So all of these are these kinds of financial perks that come with being president while you're in
04:28office. So you write for Forbes that the presidency is an exercise in delayed gratification. How so?
04:36Yeah, I really think that that's the key point here is, yes, there are presidential there are
04:42perks that come financially with being the president, but they still have to pay for
04:45their own groceries. They still have to pay for their own personal legal expenses. It's not a
04:48free lunch. It's really after the presidency that presidents are able to make an enormous amount
04:54of money. I think the best example is the Clintons between 2001 and 2016 when Hillary Clinton ran for
05:00president. They made over two hundred and forty million dollars. We know that because they released
05:05all of their tax returns for those years. And they did that again. It was they hit the speaking
05:10circuit hard. They wrote books. Hillary was a senator for a little while, but she was
05:16secretary of state. And Bill was doing, you know, speaking, writing all the all the same stuff.
05:22So they made an enormous amount of money, which helped because when they left the White House,
05:25they were roughly broke. There are other examples, though, from other previous presidents. Trump,
05:32of course, after he left office, he ended up founding Truth Social, the Twitter knockoff that
05:36has inflated his network by billions of dollars after it went public. George Bush, he made seven
05:42million dollars. George W. Bush, I should say, he made seven million dollars from his book contract
05:46and he's made tens of millions of dollars in speeches. The Obamas made sixty five million
05:50dollars from their book contract. And they also signed a Netflix deal. We don't even know how much
05:54they made from that, but I'm sure it was worth plenty of money. So when you think about those
05:59ex presidents who separate themselves a little bit from politics more, do they make out better
06:05or worse financially based on your reporting? It's hard to say, and the reason why it's hard
06:11to say is because they've separated themselves from politics. We're unlikely to get the kinds
06:15of financial disclosures that would tell us exactly how much they're making and how much
06:19they're worth at any given time. So the Clintons, we know how much they made because Hillary Clinton
06:23ran for president 16 years later and released all of her financial records for the previous,
06:28you know, almost two decades. Donald Trump, we know because he's running for president again and also
06:34his lucrative, you know, the thing that made him all the money was public companies that we were
06:39able to track. The Obamas and the Bushes, they haven't run for office. So again, or their spouses
06:44haven't run for office. So it's a little bit harder to know. We're relying on reporting and inside
06:49sources and that kind of thing. Kyle Kahn Mullins, per usual, I always appreciate your reporting.
06:54Thanks for joining me. Great to talk to you, Brittany. Thanks so much.

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