What possible relevance can his finances be of any imortance? Totally ridiculous shallow question. |
Finances are considered relevant for highly sensitive and powerful positions. High levels of debt or debt mysteriously disappearing could be red flags and so need to be fully explained. Similarly very rich people who have lots of business entanglements also have to satisfy concerns that their personal financial interests will not conflict with the public interest. Financial disclosure rules, the emoluments clause etc. are really important in ensuring we remain a representative democracy and don't become a kleptocracy. |
+1 For some highly sensitive positions involving top secret clearance, having a bad credit score can be a major risk flag because it means you might be more open to being bought for the right price. |
A 53 yr old man with a Yale degree who is still depending on his parents . |
Well that quote aged badly. Are you sure he'll have a federal pension? His old judgeship? A law license? This is why it's good to have some savings. |
He grew up in my neighborhood at around the same time I did (I did not know him). It was a normal neighborhood of small lots and small houses. Some have been renovated since then but relatively few compared to other parts of Bethesda because they lots are so small. In those days B-CC was not very highly regarded so it was not at all unusual for kids in the neighborhood to go to private school (I did too). Anyway, I'm sure his parents are comfortable, but someone who grew up where I did is NOT a trust fund kid, or likely to have parents paying credit card bills in his 50s. |
I disagree that the previous quote "aged badly." Even if Kavanaugh is not approved for the U.S. Supreme Court, he is still a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit. I don't believe anyone is suggesting that he resign from that position. Therefore, the earlier statement about his pension still stands. It's still a full pension for judges. The salary for his current position is a bit less than it would be on the U.S. Supreme Court. |
I am. There should be further investigations of the perjury, finances, and doppelgänger plan at the very least. |
You’re quite the naive chap , if Kavanaugh isn’t confirmed his days as federal judge are also numbered . The gravity of the allegations make it exceedingly obvious he has no business being a judge . I’m sorry but the creepy SOB will eventually move in with his parents in a not-so-distant future |
Kavanaugh carried $200,000 in credit card debt for a decade, until his debts magically vanished in 2017. That debt, not including mortgage, tuition, country club fees, sometimes exceeded his annual household income. Its enough to disqualify and applicant for the FBI or CIA. |
Longstanding credit card debt that exceeds your household income is seen as a red flag. It makes him vulnerable to manipulation. Find someone else. |
Once he becomes a big wig...money will pour in. |
Sheesh I wish people would stop with this $200k in debt crap. Let me explain it again...the financial disclosure form has check boxes on it, with ranges for the amount owed. He listed four accounts - three credit cards and a home equity line of credit. For each of the accounts, he checked the box that indicated that the amount of indebtedness was "$15,000 to $50,000." The media keeps reporting that he disclosed "between $60k and $200k" in debt. There is no way to know from the disclosure whether in fact he owed a total of $60k or a total of $200k, or something in-between. The forms also require you to indicate based on indebtedness "at any time" during the reporting period. Take a look at 12 months of your own credit card activity? What was the most you ever owed at one time? That's the box you check. I make about the same as Kavanaugh, and I can easily see how my accounts could add up to similar amounts, even though I pay every account in full at the end of every month. Even credit card accounts paid in full are still reported at their high water mark. In any event, your statement that he "carried $200k in credit card debt for a decade" is untrue. |
Kavanaugh's father was paid $13 million in 2004, the year he retired from his job as the head of the Cosmetics, Toiletry and Fragrance Association. His parents are loaded, he's an only child, and they can easily afford to help him out financially. My guess is that Mommy and Daddy bailed out little Brett. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/14/us/politics/judge-brett-kavanaugh.html |
We have a similar HHI and have never come close to having 60K in credit card debt. And he had large amounts year after year after year. Also his explanation that he somehow got into this debt buying Nationals tickets is completely cockamamie. |