The Rise of the Permanent Political Class
How Career Politicians Stay in Power Forever
Walk into any government building, and you’ll see them—the same faces, year after year, decade after decade. They call themselves “public servants,” but they’ve never worked a real job outside politics. They don’t know what it’s like to struggle to pay rent or worry about layoffs. Instead, they’ve turned governing into a lifelong career, insulated from the people they claim to represent.
This isn’t an accident. It’s by design.
Once elected, these politicians do everything they can to stay in office. They raise money from wealthy donors, pass laws that help their friends, and rig the system so challengers can’t compete. They talk about “fighting for the working class” while voting for policies that keep wages low and prices high. The longer they stay, the richer they get—while the rest of us foot the bill.
The Money Machine Behind Political Lifers
Running for office costs a fortune. That’s no problem for career politicians. They’ve spent years building networks of lobbyists, corporations, and special interest groups who fund their campaigns. In return, they pass laws that benefit those same donors.
Think about it: How often do you see a politician leave office poorer than when they started? Almost never. Many arrive with modest savings and leave as millionaires. They write laws that let them trade stocks based on insider information. They take high-paying “consulting” gigs after retiring. Some even get their family members jobs in the same system.
Meanwhile, the average worker hasn’t seen a real raise in decades.
The Revolving Door Between Government and Big Business
Here’s how the game works:
A politician gets elected.
They spend years making connections with corporate lobbyists.
They pass laws that help those corporations.
They leave office and get a cushy job with the same companies they used to regulate.
It happens all the time. Former lawmakers become lobbyists, earning ten times their old salary. Regulators take jobs with the industries they were supposed to oversee. It’s not illegal—because they made sure the rules allow it.
This isn’t about left or right. Both sides do it. The result? Laws that favor big banks, big tech, and big Pharma—not small businesses or working families.
How They Keep Voters Powerless
Career politicians know that if elections were fair, they’d lose. So they’ve rigged the system:
Gerrymandering – They redraw voting districts to ensure their party always wins.
Ballot Laws – They make it harder for third-party candidates to run.
Media Control – They cozy up to news outlets that paint them as heroes.
They also keep voters distracted with culture wars—fighting over issues that don’t actually change anything. While everyone’s arguing, they quietly pass bills that make their donors richer.
What Can Be Done?
This isn’t hopeless. Here’s how to fight back:
Term Limits – No one should be in office for 30 years. Force them to go back to the real world.
Ban Stock Trading – If politicians can’t profit from laws they pass, they’ll make better laws.
Open Primaries – Let voters pick candidates, not party insiders.
Public Campaign Funding – Cut off the corporate money pipeline.
Most importantly, stop voting for the same people expecting different results. The permanent political class won’t give up power willingly. It’s up to the rest of us to take it back.
The Bottom Line
Career politicians don’t work for you. They work for themselves. The longer they stay in office, the more they forget what real life is like for most Americans.
If we want change, we have to break the cycle. Otherwise, the same faces will keep making the same empty promises—while the rest of us keep getting left behind.