The comparisons between Charles Dickens’ miserly, Christmas-hating curmudgeon, Ebenezer Scrooge, and members of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet flow fast and easy. And yet Wilbur Ross, who’s maintained his position at the top of the commerce department throughout Trump’s presidency, is the clear choice in my mind for the official who most fits the bill.
By all accounts, Ross has been an absolute nightmare of a secretary, one who “keeps ethics watchdogs up at night.” In literally any other administration, he would have been fired a long time ago. And in his unrepentant pursuit of money through the years and the willingness to cast aside his own staffers in his own interest, Ross has all the makings of a man who would make Scrooge blush with distaste. He is a Michael Caine among Muppets, a serious patron of the art of corruption surrounded by chaos, antics, and hijinks.
The citizenship question was dead to begin with. There was no question whatever about that. The Supreme Court had ruled upon it, the Census Bureau had acknowledged its demise. Ross had signed a statement to that effect, and you could take Ross’s name to the bank.
We begin our examination with a look at Ross’s indifference to the suffering of his fellow citizens, which can best be summed up in how on his orders the Census Bureau politicized the decennial count. Ross announced in March 2018 that a citizenship question would be added to the coming census, forcing respondents to reveal their immigration status.
If put into practice, undocumented immigrants would find themselves faced with the choice of either ignoring census workers canvassing their neighborhood or incriminating themselves, opening the door for their own deportation. Protecting themselves and their families would mean a drop-off in money allocated to their communities and potentially reducing their state’s seats in Congress.
Ross claimed that the question was merely being added at the request of the Justice Department to better enforce the Voting Rights Act. As it turns out, Ross had been advocating for a citizenship question long before the Justice Department’s letter, as emails released in July 2018 showed — which is not what government lawyers had told the Supreme Court. Chief Justice John Roberts was not exactly pleased that the administration had lied to his face and in his opinion nuked the question. Roberts made clear that it was because “the evidence tells a story that does not match the explanation the secretary gave for his decision.”
The first bell had rung out and, as promised, the first spirit had stood before Ross. The journey to the past that had promised to show him how little happiness his money had brought him had come and gone, and the Ghost departed once more, leaving Ross alone with his thoughts.
Like Scrooge, Ross is, to quote Dickens, “a squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous, old sinner!” But unlike Scrooge, who was at least honest in his callousness, we may add that Ross is an inveterate liar, especially when it comes to his riches. Forbes Magazine reported in 2017 that Ross was not actually a billionaire as he had claimed for years. Instead, federal financial disclosure forms showed he was worth a paltry $700 million at most. Forbes reporter Dan Alexander wrote that the evidence showed that “Ross lied to us, the latest in an apparent sequence of fibs, exaggerations, omissions, fabrications and whoppers that have been going on with Forbes since 2004.”
Alexander also later reported that true to avaricious form, former colleagues of Ross “remember the commerce secretary taking handfuls of Sweet’N Low packets from a nearby restaurant, so he didn’t have to go out and buy some for himself. One says workers at his house in the Hamptons used to call the office, claiming Ross had not paid them for their work. Another two people said Ross once pledged $1 million to a charity, then never paid.”
It’s not merely past misdeeds on Ross’s ledger, as Scrooge’s deceased former partner, Jacob Marley, would put it. Like Trump, whose Atlantic City casino Ross helped him retain ownership of in the 1990s, he has continued to make money during his time in public service. When he first testified before the Senate ahead of his confirmation in 2017, Ross promised that he would divest millions of dollars’ worth of assets. Instead, he clung to them, including investments in Chinese and Russian businesses, even reportedly making money off of being exposed. One holding of his earned Ross seven figures between the time he was appointed and when he finally let it go in Dec. 2017.
A joint report between NPR and the Center for Public Integrity in 2018 found that experts were “still unable to confirm from public disclosure filings whether Ross has cleanly parted ways with all the assets he promised to divest.” The situation was bad enough that the government’s ethics watchdog refused to certify Ross’s disclosure forms given the number of assets he’d previously failed to report. And this September, newly filed forms showed that Ross made millions of dollars in outside income in fiscal year 2020.
The sumptuous feasts that the Ghost of Christmas Present had brought with him had already faded into nothing. The spirit had flitted Ross across the breadth and width of Washington, looking in on the federal employees in his charge as they celebrated Christmas Day. The embers in the fireplace sank lower — the chill in the room remained steady.









