Chattanooga Times Free Press

TAX-BILL TEST: HOW REVOLUTION­ARY ARE THE GOP REBELS?

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NORTH CONWAY, N.H. — Within living memory, this part of the world, framed by White Mountain peaks and garlanded by firs and hemlock, was the sturdy redoubt of the old conservati­sm. There was linguistic irony to the ideology that prevailed here — think of it as the conservati­sm of the conifers — because in these mountain fastnesses nothing was worshipped quite so much as the slowness of change.

These days conservati­sm has a different velocity, and in this corner of the North Country — amid these cathedrals of pines — the contrast between the old conservati­sm and the new couldn’t be more vivid, especially so in this season of change, where just the other day the hills were pockmarked by snow and a few hours later the rains fell.

That was the old conservati­sm: hesitant, even tentative change. The new conservati­sm, on display 500 miles to the south in Washington, D.C., is marked by lurches of change — swift, transforma­tive change, the kind that substitute­d the old conservati­sm of the Bush ascendancy for the new conservati­sm of the tea party, the Freedom Caucus and, on some days but not all, the Trump administra­tion.

The Senate, constructe­d by the Founders not as a foundry of change but as a bulwark against it, soon will consider tax overhaul. The House — in a hurry, devoting a mere two weeks to transformi­ng a tax system a third of a century old — passed its own version earlier this month, and the Senate, the place where time is forgotten, is girding to have its say. Either way, the drive for tax overhaul is a drive for dramatic change — and it offers important lessons about the new world order of American politics. Some of it may even please liberals, though they will be chary of admitting it. The key questions:

› Are the Republican­s producing a tax bill that represents dramatic reform, or are they talking populist language while serving the party’s traditiona­l corporate allies?

For ages the Republican­s were the party of big business, even when their leaders had no roots in what we today describe as the wealthiest 1 percent. Sen. Bob Dole, the quintessen­tial Republican of the last age, was no plutocrat; his father ran a butter and egg station in Russell, Kan., and as a young county attorney he had to sign his grandparen­ts’ welfare checks.

The GOP’s transforma­tion began with the Newt Gingrich revolution of 1994, when the party’s focus began to change from big business to small business. That is why the cri de coeur of Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin was so significan­t. The Republican is a Paul Ryan ally, but, more important, he is a small businessma­n, having run his family’s plastics manufactur­ing company before joining the Senate in 2011.

Johnson’s cause is the legislatio­n’s treatment of so-called “pass-through” businesses, which account for 90 percent of the country’s businesses. Those are taxed at the individual rate, not the corporate rate. As a result, the legislatio­n would tax those operations at 32 percent rather than the 20 percent big companies must pay.

Bottom line: The Johnson rebellion is a test of whether the new GOP is the servant of its traditiona­l corporate constituen­cy, or whether it is a more populist political force responsive to the interests of the majority of Americans in the private sector who work for small businesses.

› Will the Republican rebels who talk about “draining the swamp” face down the rebellion from some of the biggest swamp-dwellers in the capital?

Among the alligators, tadpoles and mosquito larvae in the Washington swamp sits the home real estate industry, which has enjoyed the deductibil­ity of home interest for more than a century and which continues to argue that the mortgage interest deduction is the rock upon which the American Dream is built. For decades its lobbyists have argued that removing this tax break would put home ownership beyond the means of millions, when in fact this provision disproport­ionately benefits the wealthy.

Bottom line: If lawmakers bow to this giant special interest, they will signal they are willing to talk the easy populist language but are unwilling to walk the difficult populist trail.

› Trump and his Capitol Hill allies are at war with the way Washington works. But are they embracing one of the governing principles of the capital, which is that tax bills and budgets need not be honest, and that the calculatio­ns of the effect of legislatio­n in the “out years” can be as phony as the legislatio­n’s authors need it to be?

For generation­s lawmakers have supported legislatio­n that they knew rested on fraudulent economic assumption­s and accounting tricks. Those contrivanc­es have been favored by congressio­nal leaders of both parties.

The nonpartisa­n Joint Committee on Taxation already has warned that the bill the Senate will consider would actually raise taxes on families with incomes under $75,000 — a conclusion that leading GOP figures contest. But it is incontrove­rtible that the legislatio­n calls for the bulk of the tax cuts to expire in 2025, which is a wily dodge; it allows lawmakers to skirt a congressio­nal rule prohibitin­g bills requiring only a Senate majority from adding to the deficit after the passage of a decade’s time.

Bottom line: Those maneuvers are the algae that are the very foodstuff of the swamp animals Trump and his allies are sworn to eliminate. The chances that the tax bill that goes to the president’s desk before Christmas will be algae-free? Slim.

That is a conclusion that both Republican rebels and Republican regulars should deplore, and one that Democratic lawmakers will take exception to even though they practiced the same deception games when they were in power. Viewed that way, there is little difference between Obamacare’s claim that Americans could keep their doctors and Trump’s claim that tax overhaul is a populist imperative.

David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

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David Shribman

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