The Day

Perfecting the art of the self-deal

- By Joe sCarBoroUG­H

For a president dogged with accusation­s that he is personally profiting off the presidency, such a massive giveaway adds to the stench of self-dealing that engulfs Trump.

T he political system is rigged for the richest insiders in America. When we talk about the insider, who are we talking about? It’s the comfortabl­e politician only looking out for his own interest. It is the lobbyist who knows how to put that perfect loophole in every single bill to get richer and richer and richer at your expense.

The richest Americans are paying nothing, and it is ridiculous. These guys shift paper around, and they get lucky. These hedge-fund guys are getting away with murder, when you have one who is making $200 million a year and paying very low taxes. It’s not fair. And it tells people a lot. The middle class is getting absolutely destroyed. This country won’t have a middle class soon. It’s got to end.

Those jumbled words came from the campaign speeches and interviews of Donald Trump during the 2016 campaign. The excoriatio­ns of hedge-fund managers rolled off his tongue, and the promises to force billionair­es to pay their fair share of taxes were an integral part of his populist platform. After all, Hillary Clinton was too close to Wall Street.

What fools Trump made of those Midwestern voters who wanted the reality star to go after Washington and New York elites.

As “Too Big to Fail” author Andrew Ross Sorkin reported this week, “If you’re a billionair­e with your own company and are happy to use your private jet so you can ‘commute’ from a low-tax state, the plan is a godsend. . . . Private equity and real estate executives, as has been well documented, will make out like bandits.”

Those rich insiders whom Trump walloped on his way to the White House will get more than 80 percent of this tax plan’s benefits at the end of a decade. Over that same period, most Americans will see their tax rates go up.

Middle-class voters and small-business owners already burdened by prohibitiv­e medical bills, crushing student debt or high state and local taxes will face the greatest burden, while President Trump and his family will waltz away with a windfall that could reach hundreds of millions of dollars.

The Trump clan will rake in this fortune from “pass-through” deductions, estate tax giveaways and top-rate tax reductions all because of this Republican tax cut.

For a president already dogged with accusation­s that he is personally profiting off the presidency, such a massive giveaway to the very hedge-fund managers and real estate executives he promised as a candidate to confront only adds to the stench of self-dealing that engulfs all things Trump.

Like autocrats across the world, the 45th American president has perfected the art of the self-deal.

Trump’s Republican Party looks no better, nor will it when an economic reckoning finally comes to pass in a bankrupt America. There will be no justificat­ion for having thrown on an additional $1.5 trillion to our existing $20 trillion debt — at a time when unemployme­nt was low, consumer confidence was high and Wall Street was setting records by the day.

It should be painfully obvious to a first-year economics student that there is no rational reason to pass massive tax breaks for billionair­es when the economy is humming along. The only justificat­ion can be political.

Republican lawmakers have been desperate for some time to reward the same wealthy political donors whom candidate Trump bashed during the 2016 primary process. Trump was right to say then that the political system is rigged for the richest of Americans. Unfortunat­ely, it is now Trump’s working-class supporters who will pay the highest price for believing any promise that tumbled out of the mouth of the phony plutocrati­c populist.

Joe Scarboroug­h is a former Florida congressma­n and the host of “Morning Joe” on MSNBC.

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