Chattanooga Times Free Press

GOP TAX LIES SHOW THE ROT SPREADS WIDE AND RUNS DEEP

- Paul Krugman

On Thursday morning, The New York Times revealed that Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary, has been lying for months about Republican tax plans. Mnuchin has repeatedly claimed the existence of a Treasury report that — unlike every independen­t, nonpartisa­n assessment — found that these plans would pay for themselves, increas- ing growth and hence revenues so much that the deficit wouldn’t rise. But there is no such report, and never has been; Treasury staffers weren’t even asked to study the issue.

Also on Thursday, John McCain — who has delivered sanctimoni­ous lectures on the importance of “regular order” in the Senate — declared his support for the GOP tax bill. Remember, Senate leaders rushed this bill to the floor without holding any hearings or soliciting expert testimony. In fact, at the time McCain declared his support, some key provisions were still secret, so they could be presented for a vote with no time for debate.

McCain declared that he had made his decision after “careful considerat­ion.” Careful considerat­ion of what? He didn’t even wait for an analysis of the bill’s economic impact by the Joint Committee on Taxation, Congress’ own scorekeepe­r — the only official assessment, since the Trump administra­tion was lying when it claimed to have its own analysis.

Later that day the joint committee delivered its predictabl­e verdict: Like all other reasonable studies, its review found that the Senate bill would do little for U.S. economic growth, while directly hurting tens of millions of middle-class Americans, blowing up the deficit, lavishing benefits on the wealthy and opening up new frontiers for tax avoidance.

There’s no precedent for this frantic rush to pass major legislatio­n before anyone can figure out what’s in it or what it does. By way of comparison, the Affordable Care Act went through months of hearings before it was brought to the Senate floor; the full Senate then debated the bill for 25 straight days.

And there’s a world of difference between normal political spin and the outright lies that have marked every aspect of the selling of this thing.

This whole process involves a level of bad faith we haven’t seen in U.S. politics since the days when defenders of slavery physically assaulted their political foes on the Senate floor.

There are two further things worth pointing out about this moral rot.

First, it is not, at a fundamenta­l level, a story about Donald Trump, bad as he is: The rot pervades the whole Republican Party. Some details of the legislatio­n do look custom-designed to benefit the Trump family, but both the broad outlines and the fraudulenc­e of the sales effort would have been pretty much the same under any Republican president.

Second, the rot is wide as well as deep.

I’m not just talking about Republican politician­s, although the tax debate should dispel any remaining illusions about their motives: Just about every GOP member of Congress, including the sainted John McCain, is willing to put partisan loyalty above principle, voting for what they have to know is terrible and irresponsi­ble legislatio­n. The point, however, is that the epidemic of bad faith extends well beyond elected or appointed officials.

It was remarkable, for example, to see a group of Republican-leaning economists with serious profession­al credential­s put out an open letter clearly intended to lend aid and comfort to Mnuchinesq­ue promises of miraculous growth. True, they didn’t explicitly claim that tax cuts would pay for themselves. But they didn’t clearly state that they wouldn’t, either, leaving Mnuchin free to claim — as they have to have known he would — that the letter vindicated his position.

And weasel-wording aside, it turns out that the letter misreprese­nted the research on which it was supposedly based. In other words, the rot of bad faith that has spread through the GOP has also infected many intellectu­als affiliated with the party. Not all: Some anti-Trump conservati­ves have stood by their principles. But so far they have had little influence.

So what will it take to clean out the rot? The answer, basically, is overwhelmi­ng electoral defeat. Until or unless that happens, there’s no telling how low the GOP will sink.

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