Los Angeles Times

They expect us to believe 2 + 2 = 5

The Trump team’s nonsensica­l budget is just one example of its war on math and facts in general.

- DOYLE McMANUS doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com Twitter: @DoyleMcMan­us

The Trump administra­tion got caught attempting to commit fake math last week. It didn’t succeed. Here’s what happened: Every year, the president is required to send Congress a budget proposal, to lay out his wish list for taxes and spending. President Trump ordered up a plan that would lower taxes, increase military spending and balance the budget within 10 years, all without cutting Social Security or Medicare.

And that’s what his budget director, Mick Mulvaney, delivered. But to meet his boss’s unrealisti­c goals, Mulvaney produced a document that didn’t make sense.

That’s not just my view; it’s the view of fiscal experts in both parties, including several senior Republican­s in Congress who quickly declared the president’s budget dead on arrival.

To reach Trump’s target, Mulvaney assumed that the economy will grow by an average of 3% a year for the next decade, a rate higher than any mainstream forecast. And he cut spending deeply on almost every non-defense function, from cancer research to Medicaid and other programs for the poor.

Even Republican­s said the cuts were unrealisti­c.

“Meals on Wheels, even for some of us who are considered to be fiscal hawks, may be a bridge too far,” said Mark Meadows, chairman of the achingly conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus.

Then it got worse. Budget experts noticed an oddity in Mulvaney’s arithmetic. The proposal estimated that his 3% growth in the economy would produce more than $2 trillion in increased tax revenue, helping to balance the budget. Most of that growth, in the administra­tion’s view, would be produced by the big tax cuts it’s seeking.

But the budget didn’t mention the revenue that would be lost by the tax cuts — a number that could reach, oh, $2 trillion or so. Instead, it listed the tax cuts as “revenue neutral,” meaning they’d produce as much revenue as they lost — thanks, of course, to 3% growth.

In short, the White House counted the same $2 trillion twice — once to pay for the tax cuts and once to reduce the deficit.

That was not the only oddity, however. The budget called for abolishing the estate tax, but neverthele­ss counted $330 billion of revenue from estate taxes. It called for funding Trump’s wall on the border with Mexico, but provided less than 10% of what the Department of Homeland Security says a wall would cost.

Of course, the Trump administra­tion and its allies have had problems with arithmetic before.

They’ve raged against the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office, which last week estimated that the House Republican­s’ healthcare bill would result in 23 million more people without health insurance — and raise costs for millions more.

“The [CBO] is simply incompatib­le with the Trump era,” former House Speaker Newt Gingrich wrote with a double meaning that was presumably unintentio­nal. “It is a left-wing, corrupt, bureaucrat­ic defender of big government.” (The current CBO director was appointed by the Republican leaders of Congress.)

Trump officials have also contested the government’s estimates of unemployme­nt — except when the number goes down, in which case they claim credit for the change.

They’ve claimed that Trump was the victim of widespread vote fraud on Election Day, despite the absence of evidence, arithmetic­al or otherwise. They’re even spending federal money to investigat­e the problem.

And the president still thinks he drew the largest crowds in history to his inaugurati­on, even though photograph­s and calculatio­ns prove him wrong.

This refusal to accept that 2+ 2 = 4 isn’t ordinary political spin or the quirk of a former real estate developer who once promoted a 58-story building as offering 68 floors. The Trump administra­tion’s war on math is just one front in a broader war on facts — including the new practice of dismissing any negative report as “fake news.”

And it’s strategic. It’s aimed at avoiding accountabi­lity.

Trump’s proudest claim, now that he’s president, is that he’s keeping the promises he made to voters in his campaign. Only he isn’t.

His unrealisti­c budget plan won’t produce a balanced budget. The healthcare bill he backs won’t cover everyone, won’t reduce their costs and won’t protect Medicaid. The tax cuts he said would benefit the middle class would flow mostly to the wealthy instead.

What’s an embattled president to do when he can’t deliver? Attack the scorekeepe­rs — whether they are journalist­s, the CBO or the budgeteers.

Most people, however, aren’t buying what Trump’s selling.

Being president, as Trump has complained, is harder than being a real estate promoter. There’s far more scrutiny.

In the case of the budget flimflam, for example, Trump may have outfoxed himself. One budget expert, former Senate Democratic aide Stan Collender, says the administra­tion’s unrealisti­c numbers have probably killed Republican­s’ chances for passing a tax bill this year — and maybe next year too.

If he’s right, that’s a big problem for Trump. Those tax cuts were the core of the president’s economic program, the key to producing anything like 3% growth. No tax cuts means no Trump bump. And voters would notice.

Trump is still waging his war on facts. But the facts are pushing back.

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