The 50 Richest Members of Congress
September
22, 2008, 12:00 a.m.
By Paul Singer, Jennifer Yachnin and Casey Hynes
Roll Call Staff
22/09/08 "Roll
Call" -- - Everything that
you are about to read might be wrong.
Roll
Call’s annual attempt to rank the riches of Members of Congress
is hampered by one fundamental flaw: It is based on the
lawmakers’ financial disclosure forms, which are extraordinarily
unreliable sources of information.
The
disclosure rules allow Members to report assets in broad
categories, so there is no way to tell the difference between a
$20 million investment and a $5 million investment. The top
category on the Members’ forms is “over $50 million,” so it is
impossible to accurately account for anything worth more than
that — like a professional sports team, for example. There is
also a gaping loophole for assets owned by the Members’ spouse
or dependent children; anything worth more than $1 million in
value can be reported as “over $1 million.” There is no way to
tell whether that is $1.2 million or $1.2 billion.
The
rules also don’t require reporting things of value that are not
used to produce income — most notably any primary residence or
other home that is not used for rentals. That loophole removes
from most Members’ portfolios hundreds of thousands of dollars
and in come cases millions of dollars worth of assets.
Airplanes, fancy cars, antiques or other valuable items are not
reported.
In
filing a detailed disclosure form on behalf of Sen. Bob Corker
(R-Tenn.), his accountants added this editorial note, which sums
up the problem: The form is meant to comply with Senate
disclosure rules but “is not intended to be a complete
presentation of Senator Corker’s financial position.”
Beyond
all of these flaws, there remains the fact that many, many
financial disclosure forms filed by Members of Congress are
simply inaccurate. A check mark placed in the wrong box can
inflate or deflate a Member’s apparent net worth by millions of
dollars, and misunderstandings of the rules have led Members to
understate some assets, overstate others and claim additional
assets they no longer own.
Where
the errors are obvious or have created noticeable discrepancies
from prior-year filings, Roll Call has attempted to contact the
offices to get a proper understanding of the actual value of the
asset or assets in question.
What
remains below is a ranking of the 50 wealthiest Members of
Congress based on the minimum net worth reported on their
financial disclosure forms. To achieve these numbers, Roll Call
totaled the assets listed on financial disclosure forms filed in
2008 (covering calendar year 2007) using the lowest number in
the ranges in which Members are required to report. An asset
from $500,000 to $1 million is counted as being worth $500,000,
unless the Member has provided a brokerage statement or other
documentation that offers more specific detail.
Liabilities, which are also reported in ranges, are calculated
based on the minimum value, and are subtracted from total
minimum assets to establish total net worth.
Assets
that are not included on the forms but have values that have
been established by Roll Call or other publications are not
included for the purposes of assembling this ranking, because
the Members are not required to report these numbers. This
ranking is based only on what is reported on the annual
disclosure forms.
1.
Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.)
$230.98 million
The
Massachusetts Senator claims the mantel of richest Member in the
110th Congress. Kerry’s actual holdings, however — including
those of wife Teresa Heinz Kerry, widow to ketchup heir Sen.
John Heinz (R-Pa.) — are likely much greater.
In an
April 2008 article, Forbes.com estimated Heinz Kerry’s net worth
at $1 billion.
Kerry’s disclosure forms list the value of more than 180 assets
— including Heinz family trusts and investment funds — only as
“over $1 million,” rather than the more specific ranges
including $1 million to $5 million. Senators are allowed to list
assets in the “over $1 million” category only if the items are
held independently by a spouse or dependent child.
2.
Rep. Jane Harman (D-Calif.)
$225.96 million
The
wealthy Californian, who remains heavily invested in Harman
International Industries, has seen her wealth increase nearly
$10 million since filing her 2006 report.
Harman’s report lists three accounts, including one held solely
by her husband, totaling a combined minimum of $125 million in
stock and options in the company. Harman’s spouse founded the
company, which manufactures electronics under the brand names
AKG Acoustics, Harman Kardon, Infinity and JBL, among others.
In
addition, Harman, who has no outstanding debts, lists a trust
fund worth $1.8 million and an additional $2 million in multiple
hedge fund accounts.
3. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.)
$160.62 million
The
Golden State lawmaker added $2 million to his bottom line in
2007, increasing his fortune by a little more than 1 percent.
Issa,
founder of the Vista, Calif.-based Directed Electronics, which
manufactures car alarms, claims an investment worth at least $50
million in DEI and $25 million to $50 million in Greene
Properties Inc. Both corporations own and operate office and
industrial properties in California.
His
portfolio also comprises numerous investment funds, including a
dozen valued at a minimum of $5 million each.
4.
Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.)
$80.40 million
A
descendant of oil tycoon John D. Rockefeller, the West
Virginian’s vast assets remained stable in 2007, as his net
worth increased by a little more than 1 percent.
Rockefeller’s fortunes are stored primarily in three blind
trusts with JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wachovia Corp. and United
National Bank, valued at more than $50 million, $25 million to
$50 million, and $5 million to $25 million, respectively.
Another family trust is listed at simply “over $1 million.”
The
Senator lists at least $5.5 million in debt on two loans, down
from $6.5 million in 2006, when he listed an additional $1
million loan from United National Bank in Charleston, W.Va.
5.
Rep. Robin Hayes (R-N.C.)
$78.96 million
The
Tar Heel State lawmaker’s wealth more than doubled since 2006,
when he identified about $36 million in assets.
According to Hayes’ office, the increase, including more than
$36 million in new trust funds, is the result of an inheritance.
Hayes’ mother passed away in 2007.
Among
the holdings in Hayes’ numerous trust funds are a mix of stocks
and bonds, as well as properties including land in Lake County,
Minn., and Sheldon, S.C., valued at least $5 million and $1
million, respectively.
The
funds include at least $1 million in stock in corporations such
as Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch Shell, Merck, Pfizer, General
Electric and Altria, the parent company of Philip Morris USA.
The
North Carolinian also lists a commercial loan of at least $1
million to finance his private airplane.
6.
Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.)
$65.49 million
Buchanan, the owner of several car dealerships, watched his
wealth dip slightly in the past year, dropping $1.74 million, or
more than 2 percent below his 2006 total.
While
the Florida lawmaker’s empire — comprising several automobile
dealerships, an aircraft charter business, real estate holdings
and investment accounts — amounts to $102.34 million, it carries
with it nearly $37 million in debt.
Included in that figure are new purchases in 2007: a King Air
350 aircraft and a Learjet, both listed as debts valued at $5
million to $25 million from SunTrust Leasing of Baltimore.
He
also lists an Embraer Legacy from the same creditor for $5
million to $25 million.
7.
Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.)
$55.33 million
Lautenberg, who made millions from the payroll processing
company he created five decades ago, reported that his total
minimum assets jumped about 24 percent, from $45 million in
2006, but that number is still not very revealing. Lautenberg’s
two biggest assets are two blind trusts that he set up for
himself, each worth $5 million to $25 million. Together they
count for $10 million of his assets for this list, though they
could be worth five times that amount.
The
major increase over last year appears to be in his wife’s
assets. She has several family trusts in her name, mostly
holding real estate, and between 2006 and 2007 she received
additional assets from her mother, Lautenberg’s office said.
So in
2006, Lautenberg reported that through an entity called LCBS
Corp. his wife held “over $1 million” of Mira Loma Associates, a
company holding residential real estate in Riverside, Calif. In
2007, Mira Loma was listed twice at “over $1 million” — once as
part of LCBS and once as a separate asset in Bonnie Englebardt
Lautenberg’s name. Several of her family trusts also purchased
real estate and other assets worth more than $5 million in 2007.
8.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.)
$52.34 million
Together with her husband, financier Richard Blum, Feinstein
claims a diversified portfolio that grew by $1.8 million, or an
increase of just under 4 percent, since 2006.
The
Californian lists assets with her husband that include ownership
of all or part of numerous limited partnerships.
Among
those, the Blum Family Partners, owned entirely by Blum, claims
“over $1 million” in stock in RAE Systems, a manufacturer of
chemical and radiation detection equipment. The fund also
includes “over $1 million” in a real estate investment trust.
In
addition, Feinstein lists a $5 million to $25 million investment
in Carlton Hotel Properties in San Francisco and owns condos in
both Tahoe City, Calif., and on Kauai in Hawaii, both valued at
$1 million to $5 million.
Feinstein also lists at least $2 million in debt to Bank of
America for two loans made to Blum Capital Partners.
9.
Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.)
$47.62 million
Much
of Kennedy’s wealth stems from family trusts, and the
Massachusetts Senator reported almost no change in 2007, with an
increase of less than 1 percent.
Kennedy lists one family trust valued from $25 million to $50
million, as well as four trusts worth at least $5 million each
and a blind trust totaling at least $1 million.
The
Bay State lawmaker also owns a rental property in Hyannisport,
Mass., valued at at least $1 million and lists a plot of
undeveloped land in Lafayette, La., owned by his wife, worth
from $500,000 to $1 million.
Kennedy lists $1 million in mortgage debt from Northern Trust
Co. for his Hyannisport property.
10.
Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.)
$28.65 million
If you
take financial disclosure forms seriously (never a good idea),
you might be led to believe that Smith’s net worth tripled last
year. His 2006 financial disclosure form disclosed net assets of
about $8.5 million.
But
Smith’s worth is largely derived from Smith Food Sales, a
purveyor of frozen vegetables. In 2006 he listed that asset as
being worth $5 million to $25 million. In 2007, the value has
jumped to the next category, $25 million to $50 million, so even
if the value of the asset rose from just under to just more than
$25 million, the effect on the disclosure form is to add $20
million to Smith’s minimum net worth. Since Smith doesn’t have
to report the assets of the corporation, his actual net worth
may be far above what is reported on the Congressional form.
11.
Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas)
$23.93 million
The
Lone Star State lawmaker saw his wealth increase by more than $6
million in 2007, largely thanks to his wife’s investment in a
San Antonio real estate partnership.
According to his disclosures, Maychild Ltd. increased in value
to at least $5 million, adding $4 million to his minimum net
worth under Roll Call’s evaluation method. In 2006, McCaul
listed the real estate partnership, which owns a mix of
commercial and residential properties, in the $1 million to $5
million range.
Together with his wife and family, McCaul also invests at least
$12.1 million in Clear Channel Communications, the company
founded by his father-in-law, Lowry Mays. The McCauls also list
nearly $1 million invested in Live Nation, a Clear Channel
spinoff.
The
Texan lists no debts.
12.
Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-N.J.)
$22.41 million
The
New Jersey lawmaker’s riches shrank almost imperceptibly in
2007, decreasing slightly more than 1 percent.
Frelinghuysen’s assets comprise more than $15 million from
several family trusts invested primarily in stocks.
He
lists an investment of at least $1 million in Procter & Gamble
Co., and one family trust lists an additional $5 million to $25
million invested in the same company.
Frelinghuysen’s holdings in Johnson & Johnson decreased in
minimal value by half in 2007, dropping to $500,000 from $1
million last year.
The
lawmaker’s investments also include 18 acres in Frelinghuysen
Township, N.J., valued at a minimum of $250,000, and a stake in
236 acres in Stockbridge, Mass., worth at least $100,000.
13.
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.)
$19.64 million
McCain’s true value is impossible to estimate because most of
the major assets are listed in the name of his wife or children,
thereby requiring far less detailed disclosure. Other news
outlets have suggested that Cindy McCain’s net worth may exceed
$100 million, but there is no documentation to prove that
figure.
McCain’s disclosure form lists 12 items with values of “over $1
million” that are owned by his wife and children. In 2007, the
family liquidated a trust set up by Cindy McCain’s late mother
that had a reported value in 2006 of more than $2.5 million. The
proceeds were then distributed to three other trusts, which show
a minimum value of $1.4 million. Cindy McCain also liquidated a
blind trust in 2007, selling millions of dollars worth of stock,
and the reported value of the stock she owns through Hensley &
Co. — her family’s beer distributorship — dropped more than $4
million in value last year.
The
only assets McCain claims as his own are a checking account with
a balance of $15,000 to $50,000, a money market fund worth less
than $15,000 and several book deals.
14.
Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.)
$19.42 million
McCaskill watched her net worth grow in 2007, increasing more
than 24 percent over her estimated $15.66 million total in 2006.
Among
McCaskill’s major assets: approximately 270 limited partnerships
in affordable housing real estate and a handful of “enterprise
trust investment funds” held by her husband that showed a
combined increase of approximately $2.7 million in value from
last year.
Her
spouse purchased a Kansas City, Mo., housing bond listed in the
“over $1 million” category.
The
Senator’s husband also identified a loan of at least $1 million,
the only liability listed by the couple, from Enterprise Bank.
15.
Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.)
$19.19 million
In
2006, Corker sold off several commercial properties, thereby
eliminating more than $20 million in mortgages that had counted
as liabilities against his assets. With those liabilities out of
the way, Corker’s minimum net worth jumps from about $1.5
million on his 2006 report to more than $19 million on his 2007
report.
One of
the liabilities remaining is attributed to Corker’s “dependent
child”: a loan from the Senator valued at more than $1 million,
payable at 5.05 percent interest.
In
2007, according to an explanatory note attached to his
disclosure form, Corker also divested himself of hundreds of
thousands of dollars worth of publicly traded stock in order to
avoid any appearance of conflicts of interest. He consolidated
his investments in several funds that are widely diversified and
therefore do not have to report their underlying holdings. When
one of the funds could not meet the Ethics Committee’s
requirements for an “exempt” fund, Corker withdrew from the
investment.
16.
Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.)
$19.01 million
The
New York lawmaker saw her estimated net worth increase more than
44 percent over the past year, up from $13.18 million.
The
jump results from growth in her portion of a real estate
development company, which moved up from the $1 million minimum
category to the $5 million minimum category, effectively adding
$4 million to Maloney’s bottom line.
Maloney listed a value of at least $5 million for Bosher Family,
a partner of the real estate development company HPB
Enterprises.
She
also lists a separate $1 million entry for HPB Enterprises in
Hertford, N.C.
The
Democrat also owns a “rental property and residence” in New York
valued at $5 million to $25 million, a rental property in New
Canaan, Conn., ($1 million to $5 million) and a Washington,
D.C., house ($1 million to $5 million).
Maloney also has about $2 million in mortgage debts and real
estate loans on those properties and an Arlington, Va., condo.
17.
Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.)
$18.71 million
The
Californian’s net worth rose nearly 16 percent in 2007, adding
$2.5 million to her personal wealth.
Among
her assets, Pelosi lists a Norden, Calif., town house valued at
$1 million to $5 million and a real estate investment in Napa,
Calif., worth at least $500,000.
In
addition, her husband owns a commercial property in San
Francisco valued at $5 million to $25 million. In 2006, the
property was listed as worth $1 million to $5 million, so that
property alone added $4 million to Pelosi’s net worth last year.
The
couple also owns a vineyard in St. Helena, Calif., valued at $5
million to $25 million.
The
Speaker’s husband also increased tenfold his holdings in Apple
Computer Inc. stock to at least $5 million, up from a minimum of
$500,000 in 2006.
Pelosi
and her husband also owe mortgage debt on several of their
properties, including the vineyard, totaling at least $8.75
million.
Other
debts listed by Pelosi include lines of credit totaling at least
$3.5 million.
18.
Rep. Nita Lowey (D-N.Y.)
$17.77 million
The
largest asset on Lowey’s disclosure form is an account in her
husband’s name with the investment firm Ingalls & Snyder listed
with a value of $5 million to $25 million. In 2006, Lowey listed
the same asset with a value of $1 million to $5 million.
Her
husband has several other investment accounts worth a minimum of
$1 million each, as well as at least $1 million in a profit-
sharing plan from his law firm, Lowey Dannenberg Bemporad &
Selinger (which has since been renamed). The couple also list
joint investment accounts at Glickenhaus & Co. and Fidelity
worth from $1 million to $5 million each.
19.
Sen. Elizabeth Dole (R-N.C.)
$16.45 million
The
North Carolinian and her husband, former Sen. Bob Dole (R-Kan.),
saw a modest rise in their wealth, increasing a little more than
2 percent since 2006.
The
Doles’ assets include the only liability listed by the couple
multiple checking and money market accounts worth at least $1.12
million, including one account held by Bob Dole valued at “over
$1 million.”
The
former Senator also claims a stake in five investment funds,
worth a combined minimum of nearly $5 million. He also lists
multiple promissory notes from the Robert J. Dole Irrevocable
Trust, including two worth “over $1 million.”
Elizabeth Dole also lists about 119 acres of land in Johnson
City, Kan., valued at $1 million to $5 million.
20.
Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine)
$15.05 million
Snowe’s net worth is largely tied to her husband’s position as
chairman of the board of Education Management Corp., a
Pittsburgh-based education company. Snowe lists her husband’s
stock in Education Management as an asset worth $5 million to
$25 million. In last year’s disclosure form, that asset was
valued at $1 million to $5 million.
He
also holds stock options worth $1 million to $5 million. The
couple jointly holds mutual funds shares worth more than $2
million.
21.
Rep. Tom Petri (R-Wis.)
$14.63 million
The
Wisconsin lawmaker claimed a nearly 7 percent increase in his
holdings over the past year, increasing his wealth by more than
$900,000.
Petri’s major investments include stock in both U.S. Bank and
Walgreens Co., each valued at $5 million to $25 million.
He
also claims at least $1 million in stock for both Berkshire
Hathaway and British insurance exchange Lloyds of London. The
latter has doubled in minimum value since 2006, when Petri
listed the asset as worth at least $500,000.
Petri’s only debt is a loan issued by Merrill Lynch, valued at
$1 million to $5 million.
22.
Rep. Gary Miller (R-Calif.)
$14.49 million
Having
disposed of several debts, Miller’s net worth has rocketed more
than 39 percent, or about $4 million, in his most recent report.
The
Californian no longer lists debts of at least $1 million each
for the Fontana Library Co. and the Upland, Calif.-based Church
Haven Co., which he listed last year.
Miller’s assets include an account with Pomona Bank and Trust
1st Federal worth $5 million to $25 million and 382 acres in
Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., valued at at least $5 million.
He
also added a new investment worth $1 million to $5 million in
PFF Bancorp, the parent company of Rancho Cucamonga-based PFF
Bank and Trust.
23.
Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.)
$12.43 million
The
Tennessee Senator’s largest asset is his stock in Processed
Foods Corp., a Knoxville-based company where Alexander served on
the board prior to his election to the Senate in 2002. He holds
$5 million to $25 million worth of the company’s stock, and his
wife holds “over $1 million” as well.
The
family’s other major assets are land and real estate, in
particular a patch in Nantucket, Mass., that is worth $1 million
to $5 million for Alexander and “over $1 million” for his wife.
He
incurred several new debts in 2007, taking out four loans
totaling at least $560,000.
24.
Rep. John Campbell (R-Calif.)
$11.39 million
Kids.
You pour your heart into them, and they grow up, leave and take
all your money. Or something like that.
Campbell’s financial disclosure form for 2007 notes that one of
his children reached the age of majority, so Campbell is no
longer required to report the assets that were previously
counted as belonging to the “dependent child.” That and the fact
that one of the rental properties Campbell owns was misreported
the year before (it was listed as being worth at least $1
million, but should have been listed at $500,000 to $1 million)
leaves the California Congressman showing a drop of more than $2
million in the assets that he declared last year.
However, he still owns more than $6 million worth of California
real estate, among his other holdings.
25.
Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.)
$11.34 million
Sensenbrenner, who submits one of the lengthiest financial
disclosures each year by providing his regular report along with
a detailed accounting of his net worth, saw his tally drop by
about 3 percent from the previous year.
Much
of the Wisconsin lawmaker’s losses come from a downtick in his
$6.7 million of investments in stocks and bonds, comprising $1.3
million in Merck & Co. Inc. and significant investments in Exxon
Mobil Corp., General Electric Co., Pfizer Inc. and Abbot
Laboratories Inc.
He
also owns an Alexandria, Va., home valued at $1.5 million and a
$1 million interest in a Waukesha County, Wis., home.
Sensenbrenner has also listed $7,800 in travelers checks for the
past two years.
26.
Rep. Denny Rehberg (R-Mont.)
$11.20 million
Rehberg increased his net worth by 5 percent in 2007 as the
value of his wife’s Billings, Mont., farm increased by $500,000.
The
Montanan’s office said Rehberg’s spouse reincorporated the
property in preparation to sell it, revising the property value
to at least $1 million. The Rehbergs did not ultimately sell the
parcel.
Rehberg’s assets also include at least $10 million in ranching
and livestock operations and $1 million in Rehberg Ranch
Marketing Inc.
He
also lists $1.3 million in loan debt for development,
construction and agriculture.
27.
Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa)
$10.50 million
According to Harkin’s financial disclosure forms, his minimum
net worth has essentially doubled since 2006 because of his
wife’s purchase of about $5 million worth of stock in 2007.
Harkin’s office wouldn’t comment on where the money for the
purchases came from, but the disclosure form indicates that his
wife, Ruth, bought and sold “over $1 million” worth of stock in
United Technologies Corp., where she used to be a vice
president. Harkin’s forms have previously stated that his wife’s
compensation from UTC included a “contractual right to receive
stock in the future,” so it is possible that she took stock that
was owed to her and converted it to other securities.
The
assets that are listed as belonging to the Senator alone or
through joint ownership have a minimum value of less than
$100,000. The Harkins list no liabilities.
28.
Rep. Kenny Marchant (R-Texas)
$10.49 million
In
2007, Marchant exchanged several ranch properties for a
partnership interest in Bonita Lands and Cattle, a group that
holds 3,500 acres, plus cows and equipment. Bonita became the
largest asset on his disclosure form for 2007, valued at $5
million to $25 million.
Marchant’s other major assets are rolled into a family
partnership called Marken Interests Ltd. The partnership holds
73 acres in Ft. Worth, Texas, which Marchant values at $1
million to $5 million, plus mineral rights and a wide array of
stocks.
Marchant also lists more than $3 million in liabilities, but
several of those items are mortgages that appear to have been
paid off or assumed by Bonita, which would suggest that his net
worth has already risen over the total reported on his latest
financial disclosure form.
29.
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.)
$10.39 million
In
2006, in preparation for her White House bid, Clinton closed a
blind trust worth $5 million to $25 million, reported its stock
holdings and then sold them off because of different disclosure
requirements for presidential candidates.
In
2007, her primary assets were two Citibank deposit accounts,
each worth $5 million to $25 million, one of which is new. While
the disclosure form she prepared for the presidential race
indicated a minimum net worth of about $17 million and her
current disclosure only tallies about $10 million, the wide
ranges reported for the family’s cash accounts could easily
accommodate millions more in assets than she gets credit for in
this tally.
Beyond
the two giant bank accounts, the family’s biggest asset appears
to be Bill Clinton, who earned more than $10 million giving
speeches in 2007.
30.
Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.)
$8.64 million
The
Alabaman’s fortunes diminished nearly 6.5 percent in 2007, a
drop of about $600,000.
Shelby
owns 48 shares in Tuscaloosa Title, a title abstract and
insurance company, with a value of $1 million to $5 million, and
his wife owns two shares worth $50,000 to $100,000.
The
couple transferred a 49 percent stake in a Tuscaloosa, Ala.,
apartment building, listed at $500,000 to $1 million, to the
Shelby Family Trust in late 2007.
Shelby’s assets also include a D.C. town house and a Tuscaloosa
home, both valued in the “over $1 million” category, as well as
a Tuscaloosa office building listed at $500,000 to $1 million.
The
Senator lists $1 million in mortgage debt on the apartment
building, as well as a personal note issued by Regions Bank for
$250,000 to $500,000.
31.
Rep. Steve Pearce (R-N.M.)
$8.40 million
After
the sale of his oil services company in 2003, several other
companies Pearce founded have continued to grow. Last year, LFT,
which takes its name from Lea Fishing Tools, the company Pearce
sold, rose from $500,000 to $1 million to $1 million to $5
million, and Pearce also bought investment land in New Mexico.
Roll
Call reported in April that Pearce apparently sold his company
for about $12 million, but because the assets are held in a
corporate account, he does not have to list the total amount
among his assets or income.
32.
Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas)
$8.38 million
Since
Members of Congress are required to report only properties that
are producing income, it is not uncommon to see assets hop on or
off Members’ disclosure forms from year to year when they start
or stop renting them. Doggett appears to be a case in point: An
Austin, Texas, property that was not reported in 2006 appears on
his 2007 form with a value of $100,000 to $250,000, producing
$5,000 to $15,000 in income. There is no reported transaction,
which suggests that Doggett already owned it but began renting
the “garage apt” last year.
His
other holdings, which showed a solid increase over the prior
year, include investments of at least $500,000 in several
Vanguard investment funds, as well as Whole Foods Market Inc.
33.
Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.)
$8.20 million
The
Georgia Senator paid off a small home mortgage while adding a
new Massachusetts Avenue condo to his real estate portfolio.
Isakson reports a stable fortune, increasing his net worth less
than 2 percent over his 2006 values.
His
only debt is a $15,000 to $50,000 equity loan from Wachovia
Bank.
Isakson also reported the purchase of a condo for $250,000 to
$500,000.
The
lawmaker’s assets include a mix of real estate and stocks,
including Synovus, a financial services company. Isakson lists
an investment of $1 million to $5 million in the company.
Among
his real estate holdings are 12 acres in Rabun City, Ga., valued
at $1 million to $5 million.
34.
Sen. Bob Bennett (R-Utah)
$7.93 million
Bennett’s fortune remained the same from 2006, with at least $5
million of his assets tied to Watermark Corp., a company that
owns lodging properties in Salt Lake City.
While
Bennett, who once owned all of Watermark Corp, now claims only a
one-third stake, he acknowledges in his disclosure form that he
maintains full rights to the company’s assets because he remains
a guarantor on mortgages for company properties.
Those
mortgage debts, for two Anniversary Inns located in Salt Lake
City, are valued at minimums of $1 million and $5 million,
respectively. Bennett lists the net value of those properties at
$1 million to $5 million each.
35.
Rep. Heath Shuler (D-N.C.)
$7.81 million
It was
a good financial year for the one-time NFL quarterback, who
added a more than 20 percent increase, about $1.3 million, to
his net worth.
Shuler’s investment in River Crest Development, a Del Rio,
Tenn.-based real estate development firm, jumped to a minimum
value of $1 million, doubling from its $500,000 minimum rating
last year.
The
North Carolinian also added to his portfolio the River at
Shining Rock, a Haywood County, N.C.-based real estate
development company, valued at $1 million to $5 million.
His
real estate holdings also include the Cove at Blackberry Ridge,
valued at a minimum of $5 million, and a stake in a Knoxville,
Tenn., shopping center valued at a minimum of $1 million.
Shuler
carries $1 million in mortgage debt on rental property, as well
as an additional $500,000 in business loans and a $50,000
consumer line of credit from United Community Bank in Lenoir
City, Tenn.
36.
Rep. John Spratt (D-S.C.)
$7.50 million
Spratt’s minimum net worth soared in 2007 as the value of an
800-acre swath of pasture land in Fort Mill, S.C., moved into
the $5 million to $25 million range.
The
increase over its previous minimum $1 million listing swells the
Democrat’s fortunes by $4 million, the largest factor in his 141
percent increase.
Spratt’s other assets include investments in Bank of America
Corp. valued at $500,000 to $1 million and York Bancshares at $1
million to $5 million.
His
real estate holdings include a D.C. rental unit and properties
in South Carolina, with a combined value of at least $850,000.
Spratt
carries $480,000 in debt, a combination of mortgage debt, credit
cards and promissory notes.
37.
Rep. Bill Foster (D-Ill.)
$7.37 million
Foster, who won the special election to replace former Speaker
Dennis Hastert (R), has almost all of his assets tied up in the
theater lighting company he founded with his brother in 1975,
Electronic Theatre Controls. Foster reports holding $5 million
to $25 million in a promissory note “for payments over time
arising from sale of interest” in the company, but also a $1
million to $5 million ownership interest in the company “that
owns the factory building used by ETC Inc.”
He
also has more than $1 million in savings, checking and money
market accounts.
Foster
reports no liabilities.
38.
Rep. Steve Kagen (D-Wis.)
$7.31 million
The
Wisconsin lawmaker, who operated Kagen Allergy Clinics before
his election to the House, maintains a portfolio composed
largely of bonds, as well as a money market account valued at $1
million to $5 million.
He
lists no debts.
39.
Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.)
$7.21 million
Upton’s fortunes increased by approximately $460,000 in 2007,
adding nearly 7 percent to his net worth.
Together with his wife, the Michigan lawmaker owns $1 million to
$5 million in Whirlpool, the Benton Harbor, Mich.-based
appliance company co-founded by his grandfather.
The
couple also lists $5 million to $25 million in family trusts and
an additional $1 million in an investment account.
Upton
lists no debts.
40.
Rep. David Dreier (R-Calif.)
$7.03 million
Dreier’s wealth remains relatively unchanged at just over $7
million, decreasing less than 1 percent from his estimated 2006
net worth.
The
California Republican’s primary asset, valued at $5 million to
$25 million, is an interest in Tiffany Manor Apartments, a
complex in Kansas City, Mo.
He
also has $500,000 to $1 million invested in the Oklahoma
Publishing Co., which produces both the Oklahoman newspaper and
its Web site, NewsOK.com.
Dreier, who lists no debts, also has investments worth at least
$250,000 in both Viacom and Gaylord Entertainment, which owns
resorts in Nashville, Orlando, Dallas and D.C., as well as the
Grand Ole Opry.
41.
Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.)
$7.02 million
Nelson
holds an unusual investment portfolio that is made up almost
entirely of certificates of deposit, municipal bonds and
treasury notes. As such, his net reportable worth did not grow
much over the past year, but his report also doesn’t indicate
significant investment losses.
Nelson
does report “residential acreages held for resale” in Nebraska,
with a value of $500,000 to $1 million; a year ago, that
property was valued at $1 million to $5 million. He also holds
stock worth $500,000 to $1 million in a Nebraska metal building
manufacturing company.
42.
Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.)
$6.99 million
The
Georgia lawmaker’s net worth increased nearly 15 percent, or
about $1 million, in the past year.
Much
of that growth is the result of an increase in the value of a
Minnesota Life annuities fund that Price lists in the $1 million
to $5 million category. In 2006, he listed the annuities at a
base value of $500,000.
Price
also lists partial ownership for at least $600,000 worth of real
estate in Roswell, Ga., including medical buildings and a condo
development. Together with his wife, he also lists a vacant lot
in St. Simons, Ga., valued at $1 million.
The
Republican and his spouse also have multiple retirement and
investment accounts valued at at least $4 million.
43.
Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.)
$6.20 million
Bingaman is something of a media mogul, having much of his worth
invested in partnerships that hold stock in broadcast, print
media and digital communications, among other things.
Bingaman’s net worth appears to have dropped by almost 20
percent from 2006 to 2007, as his wife sold off $2 million worth
of stock from a Goldman Sachs investment account. The couple
also put up nearly $400,000 in “capital calls” for various
investments.
44.
Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.)
$5.88 million
DeLauro remains financially steady, reporting an identical
figure for her net worth two years in a row.
The
Connecticut Democrat’s wealth comes primarily from the stake her
husband, pollster Stan Greenberg, holds in Greenberg Quinlan
Rosner Research, valued at $5 million to $25 million.
DeLauro’s only debt is a loan from Chase Auto in Phoenix, listed
at $15,000 to $50,000.
45.
Sen. John Warner (R-Va.)
$5.86 million
The
retiring Senator has assets scattered across a handful of
brokerage accounts, none of which by itself is worth more than
$1 million. Last year he added two real estate investments —
Under the Missouri Sky Properties and Golden Dome partners —
worth nearly $300,000.
Warner
reports no liabilities.
46.
Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.)
$5.77 million
Speier, a newcomer to Congress, owns four California properties
with a combined value of at least $3 million, which propels her
onto this list. She is also boosted by her husband’s assets,
including more than $1 million worth of stock in a California
investment firm.
Her
disclosure form lists no liabilities.
47.
Rep. John Linder (R-Ga.)
$5.67 million
In
August 2007, Linder sold his holdings in Grayling Industries, a
Georgia manufacturer of plastic packaging, for $5 million to $25
million, netting a capital gain of more than $5 million.
His
financial disclosure form shows two new Schwab money market
accounts, one in his name and one in his wife’s, both listed as
having a value of $1 million to $5 million. The couple also have
two other IRA funds listed in the same category. Linder’s wife
also owns three companies holding Mississippi timber land worth
at least $700,000.
48.
Rep. Randy Neugebauer (R-Texas)
$5.50 million
A
developer before he came to Congress, Neugebauer remains active
in land and real estate dealings. According to his disclosure
forms, in 2007 he sold properties valued at a minimum of
$180,000 and bought properties worth at least $317,000, and he
holds a passel of other properties, including a D.C. town house.
He also bought $1 million to $5 million in U.S. treasury bills
last year.
49.
Sen. Herb Kohl (D-Wis.)
$5.49 million
Though
he is among the wealthiest Members of Congress, Kohl’s financial
disclosure fails to do him justice under Roll Call’s
methodology.
The
owner of the Milwaukee Bucks, Kohl values the NBA team at more
than $50 million, the highest category available on the forms.
But according to Forbes, the team’s estimated value in 2007 was
$264 million.
Using
that figure would put Kohl’s net worth at about $219 million,
but his liabilities cancel out most of his assets.
The
Wisconsin lawmaker’s debts are also tied to the basketball team,
including three promissory notes from the NBA credit facility
combined to value at least $55 million. Kohl also lists a
promissory note to himself from the Bucks for more than $50
million.
The
Senator also lists a blind trust valued at more than $50
million.
50.
Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-Ill.)
$5.02 million
Emanuel’s blind trust appears to have lost a few hundred
thousand dollars in value over the past year, resulting in a
disclosure report that falsely indicates he lost almost half his
personal wealth.
In
2006, he listed the blind trust at $5 million to $25 million;
last year it was listed as from $1 million to $5 million. In a
separate filing with the ethics committee, Emanuel reported that
as of June 30, the value of the trust was $4.1 million. If that
number were reported on his disclosure form, it would raise his
minimum wealth to about $8 million.

2008 © Roll
Call Inc. All rights reserved.
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