Orlando Sentinel

The GOP and the heist of Main Street

- Tribune Content Agency www.facebook.com/RBReich/

You know the plot: The bank robbers set off a bomb down the street from the bank, and while everyone’s distracted, they get away with the loot.

In the reality TV show we’re now suffering through, President Donald Trump is the bomb.

The robbers are the American oligarchs who bankroll the Republican Party, and who are plotting the biggest heist in American history — a massive tax cut estimated to be worth up to $5.8 trillion.

Around 80 percent of it will benefit the richest 1 percent, according to the Tax Policy Center.

Trump is busily distractin­g America with his explosive tweets and incendiary tantrums — blasting Republican Sens. Jeff Flake and Bob Corker, NFL players who take a knee, so-called Dreamers, refugees, immigrants, transgende­r people, the media, “rocket man,” Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, NAFTA, Muslims.

The Trump bomb is hugely damaging — unleashing hate, threatenin­g democratic institutio­ns, isolating America. But none of this seems to bother Republican­s in Congress, except for a handful of senators who won’t be running again. That’s because congressio­nal Republican­s are concentrat­ing their efforts on pulling off the giant heist for their rich patrons.

They want to move quickly so no one notices — passing the tax cut before Christmas, with no hearings and minimal debate. If the plot succeeds, most Americans will be robbed in three ways.

First, they could lose tax deductions they rely on. Republican­s say the middle class would come out just fine because it would get a larger standard deduction. Not true. The average American’s tax bill would rise because the deductions lost would total more than the higher standard deduction that Republican­s are proposing.

Second, most Americans will lose government services that will have to be eliminated in order to pay for the giant tax cut — including, very likely, some Medicare and Medicaid.

Massive cuts to Medicare, Medicaid and Obamacare were quietly included in the budget resolution Republican­s just passed so that they could get their tax bill through the Senate with just 51 votes. (No one paid much attention because Trump was attacking grieving combat widows.)

Third, most Americans will have to pay higher interest rates on their car and mortgage loans and other money they borrow, because the huge tax cut will explode the national debt.

That debt is now around $20 trillion. If it goes much higher, it will crowd out borrowing and force interest rates upward.

Putting all this together, the theft would be the largest redistribu­tion from the bottom 90 percent to the richest 1 percent in history.

Republican­s’ biggest fear is that word of the heist will leak out to the public, and their tax bill will be defeated by a handful of Senate Republican holdouts who feel the public pressure.

That’s exactly what happened with their plan to repeal the Affordable Care Act. The GOP’s big-money patrons pushed for repeal not because they had any principled objection to the ACA, but because they didn’t want to fork over $144 billion in taxes on incomes over $1 million to pay for it over the next decade.

In the end, Republican­s couldn’t get away with it because Americans learned that more than 23 million people would lose their health coverage, and Medicaid would also be on the chopping block.

Trump was willing to distract the public’s attention to give Republican­s a shot at repeal, but the moment the public started catching on, he blew their cover. After the Congressio­nal Budget Office detailed the consequenc­es of a Republican reform bill, Trump called it “mean.” He could do the same with the tax bill. The moneyed interests who run the GOP depend on the Trump bomb to divert attention from their huge heist. Their challenge is to make sure the bomb doesn’t go off in the wrong direction.

 ??  ?? Robert Reich On the left
Robert Reich On the left

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