Las Vegas Review-Journal

The rotten core of the Republican Party

- Binyamin Appelbaum Binyamin Appelbaum is a columnist for The New York Times.

Rep. Kevin Mccarthy of California, the top House Republican, recently took to social media to warn that Democrats have hatched a dastardly plot. “Democrats,” he said, “want to track every penny you earn so they can then tax you and your family at the maximum possible amount.”

Well, yes. Democrats want Americans to pay the full amount they owe in taxes.

What doesn’t get enough attention is that many Republican­s seem not to agree.

Republican­s in recent decades have sharply reduced the federal income tax rates imposed on wealthy people and big companies, but their opposition to taxation goes beyond that. They are aiding and abetting tax evasion.

Republican­s have hacked away at funding for the IRS, enfeebling the agency. When the rich and powerful open loopholes in the tax code, Republican­s reliably fight to keep the loopholes open. Indeed, they valorize Americans who find ways to pay less, a normalizat­ion of anti-social behavior that may be even more damaging than the efforts at bureaucrat­ic sabotage.

Former President Donald Trump’s loud and proud declaratio­n that paying very little in taxes “makes me smart” was just a more brazen articulati­on of what has become party orthodoxy.

The Democratic proposal targeted by Mccarthy — he calls it “un-american” — would make it harder for wealthy people to cheat on their taxes.

The IRS estimated in 2019 that Americans conceal from taxation more than half of income that is not subject to some form of third-party verificati­on like a W-2, the form that the government uses to verify ordinary wage income. This blind spot costs the government hundreds of billions of dollars in unpaid taxes. In comparison, more than 95% of wage income is reported.

Under the current version of the Democrats’ plan, which is part of the Biden administra­tion’s sweeping “Build Back Better” legislatio­n, banks would be required to submit annual reports on accounts with total inflows and outflows exceeding $10,000, excluding paychecks and government benefits. The banks would report the total amount deposited in the account and the total amount withdrawn. There would be no reporting of individual transactio­ns. The informatio­n would give the IRS a better chance to catch cheaters — and it would provide a salutary reminder for people to pay what they owe.

The Biden administra­tion recently cemented an internatio­nal agreement to establish a 15% global minimum tax on corporate income. The long-sought deal would reduce the incentive for American firms to evade taxation by pretending to generate revenue in low-tax havens like Ireland and roughly half the islands in the Caribbean — a practice that has become all but business as usual in industries with intangible products, like finance, technology and pharmaceut­ical research.

The minimum corporate tax, like the bank reporting requiremen­t, is not aimed at increasing what is owed. It is aimed at collecting what is owed already.

Improving tax collection has another important benefit. Democracy — and capitalism — rest on a lacework of mutual obligation. People fulfill their own responsibi­lities because they are confident others will, too. Collecting taxes, especially from the rich and powerful, is an affirmatio­n of that faith.

Felicia Wong, the president of the Roosevelt Institute, a progressiv­e think tank, said the corporate tax agreement, which includes 136 countries, is valuable as a demonstrat­ion that government­s have the ability to impose their will on multinatio­nal corporatio­ns in the service of the public interest — a hopeful model for confrontin­g other problems, like climate change.

Both plans, however, must overcome Republican opposition.

The GOP was reborn in the 1970s under the banner of resistance to taxation, led by anti-tax men like Jack Kemp and Ronald Reagan. It remains the party’s fixation, the one major area of policy on which congressio­nal Republican­s were able to agree during the Trump administra­tion.

By way of ideologica­l justificat­ion, Republican­s like to talk about liberty, by which they mean a narrow and negative kind of freedom from civic duty and mutual obligation.

But the opposition to taxation has always found its deeper wellspring­s of motivation in concern about how the money will be spent. In California, the rise of anti-tax activism was inextricab­ly intertwine­d with the decline of a white electoral majority. It wasn’t a question of whether Americans should help one another. The real question was who would be helped.

Opposition to progressiv­e income taxation also draws strength from an imagined democratic ideal in which the people who vote for taxation, pay the taxes and get the benefits are all one and the same.

History tells a different story. From the outset, taxation in the U.S. was designed as an antidote to inequality. The government initially chose to raise revenue through tariffs collected from wealthy merchants. The introducti­on of a federal income tax in the early 20th century was a different means to the same end. In a historical analysis published last year, German political scientists Laura Seelkopf and Hanna Lierse showed that progressiv­e taxation is a hallmark of democratic governance.

Political philosophe­rs have long fretted that democracy allows the poor to plunder the rich. The opposite has proved more nearly true. Progressiv­e taxation is not a threat to the wealthy. It is a small price to pay for prosperity.

Cutting taxes to starve social programs is, by itself, a threat to the sustainabi­lity of the American experiment in multicultu­ral democracy. In enabling resistance to lawful taxation, Republican­s are engaged in an even more direct assault.

Having failed to constrain government spending through the democratic process, they are seeking to undermine government.

Mccarthy is right to frame a fairly technical change in tax rules as an issue that goes to the heart of American democracy. Democracie­s impose higher taxes than other forms of government because democracie­s are communitie­s of common purpose. We create and maintain our society through our contributi­ons.

Or we don’t. And things fall apart.

The GOP was reborn in the 1970s under the banner of resistance to taxation, led by anti-tax men like Jack Kemp and Ronald Reagan. It remains the party’s fixation, the one major area of policy on which congressio­nal Republican­s were able to agree during the Trump administra­tion.

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