Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump courts Heitkamp in North Dakota tax pitch

- BY JILL COLVIN AND KEN THOMAS

MANDAN, N.D. — President Donald Trump made an overt pitch Wednesday for Democrats to support his tax overhaul plan, singling out a North Dakota Democratic senator whose vote would be prized by the White House.

Delivering an outdoor speech to a crowd of hundreds at an oil refinery, Trump called for the state’s governor and congressio­nal delegation to join him on stage, including Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, the only statewide elected Democrat in heavily Republican North Dakota.

“Everybody’s saying: What’s she doing up here?” Trump said of the first-term senator, adding: “I hope we’ll have your support” and calling her “a good woman.”

Heitkamp, up for reelection next year, traveled to the state with Trump aboard Air Force One as the president sought to frame the tax overhaul as a “once in a generation” opportunit­y to cut taxes and simplify the tax code.

But while Trump’s White House is talking hopefully about bipartisan­ship, GOP leaders in Congress have made clear they’re pursuing a go-it-alone strategy on taxes that has shut Democrats out of the negotiatio­ns.

Trump used the event to sell his plan, but its details are still to be determined. He said he’d be getting into “great detail” on the plan in the next two weeks. Overall, it calls for a major simplifica­tion of the tax code and lowering personal rates, especially for the middle class, by raising the standard deduction, among other changes, and lowering business taxes to about 15 percent.

“It’s your money, not the government’s money,” Trump said.

Trump emphasized the last time Congress passed a major tax overhaul, under President Ronald Reagan in 1986, Democrats signed on.

“Both of the Reagan tax cuts were passed by a Democratic majority in the House, a Democratic speaker, and a vast majority of Democrats in the Senate, including a Democratic senator from the great state of North Dakota,” Trump said. “So it can happen. Are you listening Heidi?”

“If Democrats don’t want to bring back your jobs, raise your pay and help America win — voters should deliver a clear message: Do your job to deliver for America, or find a new job,” he said.

Trump traveled to North Dakota shortly after a meeting with congressio­nal leaders at the White House in which the president sided with Democrats on a deal to fund the government and raise the federal borrowing limit for three months, all aimed at expediting money to Harvey relief.

Marc Short, Trump’s top legislativ­e adviser, told reporters aboard Air Force One that “helping to clear the decks in September enables us to focus on tax reform for the American people. We need to get the economy growing again and that’s what the president focused on.”

Trump has sought to pressure Democrats to back the tax plan, a key priority after his push to overhaul the health care system failed.

During his first tax speech last week in Missouri, the state’s Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill stayed away. In his remarks there, Trump urged people to vote her out of office if she did not support lowering taxes.

Heitkamp is expected to face a tough challenge in next year’s midterm elections. While she narrowly won the state in 2012, she is personally popular and has been careful to stake out policy positions that don’t stray too far from the state’s right-leaning electorate.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump stops to look at the crowd as he takes the stage to speak Wednesday at the Andeavor Refinery in Bismarck, N.D., to promote his tax overhaul plan.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump stops to look at the crowd as he takes the stage to speak Wednesday at the Andeavor Refinery in Bismarck, N.D., to promote his tax overhaul plan.

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