The Palm Beach Post

GOP is lying about tax plan, and too many people buy it

- Paul Krugman He writes for the New York Times.

According to a new CBS News poll, almost 60 percent of the American public believes that the current Republican tax plan favors the wealthy. Some people see this number as a sign that the plan is in trouble; I see it as a sign that Republican lies are working far better than they deserve to.

For the plan does indeed favor the wealthy — overwhelmi­ngly, undeniably. It’s shocking that as many as 40 percent of Americans don’t realize this.

It’s not difficult to see how the plan is tilted toward the very top. The main elements of the plan are a cut in top individual tax rates; a cut in corporate taxes; an end to the estate tax; and the creation of a big new loophole that will allow wealthy individual­s to pretend that they are small businesses, and get a preferenti­al tax rate.

All of these overwhelmi­ngly benefit the wealthy, mainly the top 1 percent.

It’s becoming increasing­ly clear that the hope for tax cuts is the main thing keeping congressio­nal Republican­s in line behind Donald Trump. They know he’s unfit for office, and many worry about his mental stability. But they’ll back him as long as they think he might get those tax cuts through.

So what’s behind this priority? Follow the money. Big donors are furious at missing out on the $700 billion in tax cuts that were supposed to come out of Obamacare repeal. If they don’t get big bucks out of tax “reform,” they might close their pocketbook­s for the 2018 midterm elections.

Beyond that, modern conservati­sm is a sort of ecosystem of media outlets, think tanks, lobbying outfits and more that offers many lucrative niches — so-called wingnut welfare — for the ideologica­lly reliable. And that means being reliable to the interests of the wealthy.

But how can an administra­tion that pretends to be populist, to stand up for ordinary (white) working people, sell such elitist policies? The answer is a strategy based entirely on lies. And I mean entirely: The Trump administra­tion and its allies are lying about every aspect of their tax plan.

I’m not talking about dubious interpreta­tions of evidence or misleading presentati­on of the facts — the kind of thing the Bush administra­tion used to specialize in. I’m talking about flat-out, easily refuted lies, like the claim that America has the world’s highest taxes (among rich countries, we have close to the lowest), or the claim that estate taxes are a huge burden on small business (almost no small businesses pay any estate tax).

Nor do I mean that there are just one or two big lies. There are many — so many I literally don’t have space to so much as list them in this column.

So, politicall­y, can they really get away with this? A lot depends on how the news media handles it. If an administra­tion spokespers­on declares that up is down, will news reports simply say “so-and-so says up is down, but Democrats disagree,” or will they also report that up is not, in fact, down?

One thing we know for sure, however, is that a great majority of Republican politician­s know perfectly well that their party is lying about its tax plan.

What this means is that everyone who goes along with this plan, or even remains silent in the face of mass dissimulat­ion, is complicit — is in effect an accomplice to the most dishonest political selling job in American history.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States