Albany Times Union

Democrats shouldn’t be trying to coddle the rich

- The following is from a St. Louis Post-dispatch editorial:

This newspaper has long argued that Democrats should leave in place a cap on deductions that wealthy taxpayers can claim based on their state taxes — the one good part of the Republican­s’ 2017 tax-cut package. Now Democrats are nonetheles­s on the verge of dramatical­ly raising that cap, a move that is being rightly criticized as a gift to the rich. It’s not too late to get it right and leave the cap alone.

The 2017 tax cuts were a boondoggle that will cost America for years, all so the GOP could reward its wealthy benefactor­s. The claim that the cuts would pay for themselves through economic growth was always bunk; the cuts are now estimated to add almost $2 trillion to the deficit over a decade.

But the Republican coddlethe-rich plan did include one reasonable provision: a cap of $10,000 on the amount that taxpayers could deduct from their federal taxes based on what they pay in state taxes. It takes a good deal of wealth to rack up a $10,000 state tax bill, so that provision would only hit the rich. Democrats alleged that the provision was meant to punish blue states like New York and California, which have both lots of rich people and high state taxes.

But whatever the dark motives behind it, the provision made sense. We encouraged the Biden administra­tion to leave the cap in place and continue to believe that’s the right policy.

Unfortunat­ely, a provision raising that cap to $80,000 is currently included in President Joe Biden’s social spending and climate bill that passed the House Friday — mainly because powerful Democrats like Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York want the cap raised in order to placate their wealthy constituen­ts and keep their current state tax structures in place.

That provision might serve Schumer but not the country. The Democrats’ often-wrong left flank is right on this one. “You can’t be a political party that talks about demanding the wealthy pay their fair share of taxes and then end up with a bill that gives large tax breaks to many millionair­es,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

America already has one party that coddles the rich. It doesn’t need a second one. The Senate should revamp the bill to leave the cap alone.

The Democrats’ often-wrong left flank is right on this one.

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