Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

‘Honest’ ad gets the facts mostly wrong

- Eric Litke

Targeting Wisconsin as one of the four most critical states in the 2020 presidenti­al election, the Priorities USA super PAC announced it plans to spend at least $300,000 per week on digital ads in the state.

The Democratic group’s initial volley includes a 30-second ad titled “Bill & Mona” that shows a couple on their farm discussing President Donald Trump.

“I paid into Medicare my whole life,” says the farmer identified as Bill A. “Trump wants to cut it just to pay for tax breaks to billionair­es.”

Adds Mona A.: “It is just the rich wanting to be richer, and the rest of us are just going to have to deal with it.”

Priorities USA has dubbed its push the “Let’s Be Honest” campaign.

Let’s see if its claim on billionair­e tax breaks is worthy of the slogan.

Ad combines separate measures

The “tax breaks” in the ad are referencin­g the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, an overhaul of the tax code signed into law by Trump in December 2017, according to a supporting document provided by Priorities USA.

The Medicare “cut” refers to changes in Trump’s proposed budget.

We’ll examine those elements separately and then see if it’s reasonable to connect them.

‘Tax breaks to billionair­es’

The ad implies much — or all — of the tax cut referenced is going to billionair­es.

The tax cut does provide tax breaks for billionair­es. And lots of other people too.

The cuts are projected to total $1.8 trillion over the next decade, according to the Tax Foundation, a think tank that generally has a pro-business leaning.

In 2018, about 80% of taxpayers had a tax cut due to the new law, according to the Urban Institute-Brookings Institutio­n Tax Policy Center, an independen­t group that models the effects of tax legislatio­n.

The savings do skew toward highincome earners. The center said 21% of the total tax savings went to the highestear­ning 1% of taxpayers in 2018, more than the total for the bottom 60%.

By 2025, that gap is projected to increase, with 25% of the tax savings going to the top 1%.

We couldn’t find a breakdown of exactly how much of that money is going to billionair­es. The Tax Policy Center stopped its analysis at 0.1% of highest income earners. That group includes about 140,000 tax returns and by 2025 will receive about 11% of the total tax savings from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

Meanwhile, Forbes reported there are 607 billionair­es in the U.S. in 2019. That is less than half of the top 0.001% of income earners. Suffice it to say, the vast majority of the money is not going to billionair­es.

The Medicare ‘cut’

The Medicare cost reduction under Trump’s budget is expected to be roughly $600 billion over the next 10 years when compared to current spending levels, according to the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office.

The bipartisan Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget, largely agrees, putting the number at $575 billion. There are some important caveats. About 85% of the savings comes from reductions in what Medicare pays to providers, according to the Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget.

“Those cuts would primarily reduce what Medicare pays providers, and I would not expect them to have negative effects on Medicare beneficiaries,” Matt Fiedler, an economics fellow at the leftleanin­g Brookings Institutio­n, said in an email.

Medicare changes aren’t exactly an original idea, either — Trump is actually building on proposals from Democratic President Barack Obama. Obama’s last budget proposed trimming Medicare spending by a pretty similar amount: $420 billion over 10 years.

Connecting the dots

That brings us to the root of the issue — is it fair to connect proposed Medicare changes to tax cuts from two years ago?

In October 2017, PolitiFact National gave U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer a Half True rating for claiming that Republican­s were proposing “to pay for their giant tax cut to the rich by gutting Medicare and Medicaid.”

We noted at the time that drawing a direct link between specific tax cuts and Medicare-Medicaid cuts was exaggerate­d since they were separate pieces of legislatio­n.

The Priorities USA ad makes a different claim, starting with the fact it refers to just Medicare (not Medicare and Medicaid) and, instead of “the rich,” it refers specifically to billionair­es. In addition, we’re now dealing with the final version of the tax cuts and a firm budget proposal.

That said, the ad does connect the two pieces of legislatio­n in the way Schumer did, which we noted is problemati­c.

Finally, Fiedler notes that — broadly speaking — cutting taxes does require other adjustment­s be made.

“Tax cuts aren’t a free lunch; lower tax revenue will lead to higher deficits, which will require either future tax increases or spending cuts,” he said in an email. “Medicare is a substantia­l fraction of federal spending, so it’s certainly possible that Medicare would bear a portion of those future adjustment­s, but it’s impossible to say with any precision where those adjustment­s would ultimately fall.”

Our ruling

The Priorities USA web ad said Trump is cutting Medicare to fund tax breaks for billionair­es.

Any large-scale tax cuts reduce revenue and can require cuts elsewhere in the federal budget, where Medicare is a high-cost piece.

But the ad overreache­s in directly linking tax cuts signed into law almost two years ago and Medicare changes that are still in the works.

Referring to the tax cuts simply as “to billionair­es” is a stretch as well. The cuts do disproport­ionately benefit the wealthy, but a very small portion of the money actually goes to billionair­es.

We rate this claim Mostly False.

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