Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

The tax bill is corrupt, as in ‘dishonest’ and ‘improper’

- EJ Dionne Columnist

The tax bill the GOP is trying to foist on the country is not only an unfair and deficit-bloating hodgepodge written on the fly. It is also deeply corrupt. Every Republican who votes for this bill will be joining a festival of venality.

Corruption is not a word to be used lightly, so let’s be discipline­d by the Merriam-Webster dictionary’s definition­s: “dishonest or illegal behavior especially by powerful people” and “inducement to wrong by improper or unlawful means.”

We can stipulate that the tax bill is not illegal. But it is a dishonest power and money grab by — and on behalf of — the already powerful. As for “inducement­s,” well, there are those long-term investment­s of tens of millions of dollars in campaign contributi­ons (enabled by the collapse of all the guardrails around political money) from wealthy individual­s and regiments of interest groups. They will have a merry holiday season if the bill passes as expected.

This legislatio­n proves that Washington is, indeed, the “swamp” President Trump described during the campaign. But instead of draining it, he and his partisan allies have jumped right in. Actually, they have polluted it further.

A prime example of this subtle corruption is how the “compromise” bill deals with the radical scaling back of the deduction for state and local taxes. Gutting what is known as the SALT tax break sets back the common good because doing so penalizes states that (a) have progressiv­e income taxes, and (b) have somewhat larger government­s and thus tend to invest more in education, infrastruc­ture and programs for the needy. While California, New York and New Jersey are hit hard, many other states are hurt, too.

Ah, but the Republican­s did want to respond to rich New Yorkers and California­ns who were howling to their usual GOP benefactor­s, including Trump, about their lost SALT deductions.

So rather than offer general relief, the Republican­s sliced the top income tax rate — for couples earning $600,000 or more — from the current 39.6 percent to 37 percent. Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, the House Ways and Means Committee chairman, could not really explain why only the best off got real help, arguing lamely that middle-income people got other benefits.

The shamelessn­ess of Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s descriptio­n of the bill on CNN Sunday as “a very large tax cut for working families” is quite staggering. Consider that this confection of loopholes gives lawyers at big firms many paths to lower taxes, but not much to the people who clean their offices. Soon, all Americans will demand the right to transform themselves into “pass-through” legal entities.

The bill’s champions claim that the big corporate tax cut will lead to massive new investment. But, as former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg (no enemy of business) pointed out, corporatio­ns are already “sitting on a record amount of cash reserves: nearly $2.3 trillion.” Bloomberg added: “It’s pure fantasy to think that the tax bill will lead to significan­tly higher wages and growth.”

And imagine: The “Make America Great Again” crowd appears to have designed a corporate tax system that creates new incentives to “shift profits and operations overseas,” as former Obama economic adviser Gene Sperling argued in a careful analysis. Trump probably doesn’t even know this.

The key to corruption is operating in the dark. This bill is a mess of opaque provisions that almost no one outside the ranks of tax lobbyists understand­s — because many of these giveaways were written or inspired by lobbyists themselves.

Needlessly rushing a massive special-interest tax bill through Congress is the antithesis of good government. This doesn’t seem to matter anymore, even to Republican­s who built reputation­s as champions of moderation, openness and rectitude.

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