The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Pa. race to test how tax law plays with voters

- By Bill Barrow

NORTH HUNTINGDON, PA. » In southwest Pennsylvan­ia, Democratic congressio­nal hopeful Conor Lamb hammers the new Republican tax law as a gift to corporatio­ns and the wealthy that will add to the national debt and give the GOP-led Congress an excuse to gut Social Security and Medicare.

Rick Saccone, Lamb’s opponent in the 18th Congressio­nal District that wraps around Pittsburgh, says the sweeping tax changes will goose the economy and give Americans bigger paychecks. National Republican groups, meanwhile, are blanketing television stations here with ads to tell voters that Lamb simply doesn’t want them to have lower taxes.

It’s a defining fault line ahead of the 2018 midterm elections, and the outcome for Lamb could serve as a guidepost for Democrats as they try to reclaim a House majority this November.

Democrats must flip at least 24 GOP-held seats to regain a majority, and the Pennsylvan­ia seat — in a district Trump won by almost 20 points in 2016 — would be an unexpected boost.

The emphasis being placed on taxes ahead of the March 13 special election here also may remind the power players in Washington that the midterm elections will not revolve exclusivel­y around the tempests that regularly consume the nation’s capital — the Russia investigat­ions, a lingering immigratio­n stalemate, the occasional government shutdown. The November outcome will turn as much or more on voters’ fundamenta­l impression­s about how Congress is affecting their wallets, now and in the future.

“Voters care about the economy and health care,” Lamb said in an interview the same day Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi spent eight hours on the House floor to emphasize Democratic support for young immigrants threatened with deportatio­n.

But as Lamb tries to make his race about those bread-and-butter matters, he’s getting hammered by Republican­s.

The GOP’s House campaign committee has aired a television ad hailing Saccone as a faithful tax cutter and accusing Lamb of using “the same crummy words” as Pelosi to decry the tax bill. Pelosi has mocked some U.S. corporatio­ns for giving employees one-time bonuses after the tax cuts; she called them “crumbs” in comparison to benefits for many large businesses and their executives.

Lamb doesn’t say bonuses or wage hikes are crumbs, but he calls the tax law a “betrayal” of middleclas­s households.

“It’s great we got tax relief for the working class and middle class, too, but we could have had that without adding a penny to the national debt,” the former federal prosecutor told about 150 voters at a recent campaign stop.

He said Republican­s had to “give tax relief to their donors, to the 1 percent and big corporatio­ns,” while setting up Speaker Paul Ryan’s long-term aims of limiting the price tag of Medicare and Social Security.

“Paul Ryan came out and said it the very next day,” Lamb said, referring to Ryan’s comments after Congress passed the tax law. The speaker told a Denver radio station, “We’re going to have to get back next year at entitlemen­t reform.”

Saccone, 59, is keeping his argument plain.

“Tax cuts, lower regulation­s and smaller government” are good for business and the people who work for them, he said in an interview. That’s “the Trump agenda” and “the Saccone agenda.”

The Pennsylvan­ia state representa­tive is sidesteppi­ng nonpartisa­n analyses that the new law will add $1.5 trillion to the national debt over the course of a decade, despite Republican­s’ insistence that economic growth will replenish the treasury with higher tax receipts.

Asked about the congressio­nal spending agreement — after it was announced but before it had passed — Saccone said, “I haven’t reviewed the details.” He added that he’d “never” cut Social Security or Medicare.

Lamb acknowledg­es he may not have the easier sell, and some other Democrats agree with him.

“If we spend all of our cycle running against the tax bill, it’s probably going to be a mistake,” said Julie Greene, a former Democratic National Committee aide who now leads midterm campaign efforts for the AFL-CIO, the nation’s largest union organizati­on.

During fall debate over the tax overhaul, public opinion aligned with Democrats against the bill. But the GOP believes opposition will wane now that workers who thought they wouldn’t get a tax cut are seeing benefits.

“When I see a real-time improvemen­t in my paycheck, I’m not thinking about what the CEO is making or his tax windfall. We need to take a more holistic approach,” Greene warns.

Lamb insists that’s what he’s doing. Voters, he believes, can see GOP priorities in a tax law that makes corporate tax rate cuts permanent, while putting a 2026 expiration date on changes for individual­s. They can see that the longterm balance sheet “puts us in a weaker position” when considerin­g a trillion-dollar commitment to infrastruc­ture that will require more borrowing on top of a rising debt, he says.

Even if they pay less in taxes, Lamb says, voters who hear simplistic arguments are “insulted.”

 ??  ??
 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Feb. 8, 2018, photo, Pennsylvan­ia State Rep. Rick Saccone, the Republican candidate for the March 13 special election in Pennsylvan­ia’s 18th Congressio­nal District, talks about his campaign at his headquarte­rs in Canonsburg, Pa. A Pennsylvan­ia...
KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Feb. 8, 2018, photo, Pennsylvan­ia State Rep. Rick Saccone, the Republican candidate for the March 13 special election in Pennsylvan­ia’s 18th Congressio­nal District, talks about his campaign at his headquarte­rs in Canonsburg, Pa. A Pennsylvan­ia...
 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018, photo, Conor Lamb, the Democratic candidate for the March 13 special election in Pennsylvan­ia’s 18th Congressio­nal District, talks about his campaign at his headquarte­rs in Mount Lebanon, Pa. A Pennsylvan­ia...
KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018, photo, Conor Lamb, the Democratic candidate for the March 13 special election in Pennsylvan­ia’s 18th Congressio­nal District, talks about his campaign at his headquarte­rs in Mount Lebanon, Pa. A Pennsylvan­ia...
 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018, photo, Conor Lamb, the Democratic candidate for the March 13 special election in Pennsylvan­ia’s 18th Congressio­nal District, talks about his campaign at his headquarte­rs in Mount Lebanon, Pa. A Pennsylvan­ia...
KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018, photo, Conor Lamb, the Democratic candidate for the March 13 special election in Pennsylvan­ia’s 18th Congressio­nal District, talks about his campaign at his headquarte­rs in Mount Lebanon, Pa. A Pennsylvan­ia...

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