Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP boxed in on infrastruc­ture

- OPINION JENNIFER RUBIN

White House press secretary Jen Psaki at Thursday’s briefing gave a preview of how the Biden administra­tion will confront the predictabl­e objections to its large infrastruc­ture plan funded by corporate tax increases.

Told that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had declared Republican­s will fight the plan “every step of the way,” she cheerily responded that there was plenty that Republican­s and Democrats agree on. Everyone likes infrastruc­ture!

“Where there is agreement with across the political spectrum from investment and infrastruc­ture, doing more to be competitiv­e with China, and what we’re really talking about here is how to pay for it,” Psaki said. “And so what we’re looking for is proposals of alternativ­es.”

She then issued an implicit challenge: If Republican­s don’t want to raise the corporate tax rate, what alternativ­e would they offer? “We’re happy to hear those proposals,” she said.

The White House is fully aware that Republican­s are in a box. Having declared themselves in favor of infrastruc­ture for years, they either have to come up with a tax scheme that will fall far more heavily on ordinary taxpayers, or give up their phony deficit mania (which does not apply to tax cuts, apparently).

This puts Democrats in both the roles of being fiscal conservati­ves (pay as you go!) and defenders of working-class Americans.

Democrats are managing to avoid bashing businesses outright. Psaki pointed out that for 70 years or so, the corporate tax rate had been 35 percent until the last administra­tion dropped it all the way to 21 percent (and loosened other rules allowing many big companies to avoid paying taxes altogether). President Joe Biden’s proposal to push the rate up to only 28 percent is “incredibly reasonable,” she said.

Psaki was echoing the president’s comments, when he said, “In 2019, an independen­t analysis found that there are 91 . . . Fortune 500 companies, the biggest companies in the world, including Amazon that use various loopholes so they pay not a single, solitary penny in federal income tax. I don’t want to punish them, but that’s just wrong. That’s just wrong.”

He added, “A fireman and a teacher paying 22 percent? Amazon and 90 other major corporatio­ns paying zero in federal taxes? I’m going to put an end to that.” (Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

I do not expect Republican­s will be shamed out of protecting corporate America’s huge windfall (even as they declare themselves the party of the little guy), nor do I expect them to support anything near the magnitude of Biden’s once-in-a-generation investment.

But it seems that if it comes to it, the administra­tion will be perfectly content to take the case to the voters and proceed without any Republican buy-in. The question really is in the Republican­s’ court: Do they want to run in 2022 on a platform of defending corporate greed and opposing infrastruc­ture?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States