Texarkana Gazette

Trump announces plan to ‘jumpstart America’

- By Jill Colvin and Josh Lederman

DETROIT—Promising to “jumpstart America” to a new era of prosperity, Donald Trump announced a revamped economic plan Monday aimed at revitalizi­ng a stagnant U.S. economy by cutting taxes for workers and businesses. He assailed Hillary Clinton as a candidate who would merely extend a Democratic period of old ideas and weakness.

Trying to move past recent stumbles, Trump proposed a simplified three-bracket income tax system that hewed closely to what House Republican­s have recommende­d, the latest indication the GOP presidenti­al nominee is working to put infighting with his party’s leaders behind him. In a shift from the plan he proposed during the primary season, he increased the tax rate that the highest-earning Americans would pay.

With few exceptions, Trump provided more of a philosophi­cal basis for an economic plan than a series of specifics. He did spell out proposed tax brackets and called for greater child care deductions for families.

As he called for urgent change away from Democratic policies, he envisioned a nation refocused on manufactur­ing at home and wary of trade deals abroad—a country bearing little resemblanc­e to the globally focused economy of recent years.

“Americanis­m, not globalism, will be our new credo,” he said in his address at the Detroit Economic Club. “Our country will reach amazing new heights—maybe heights never attained before.”

Delivering his speech from a teleprompt­er, Trump was interrupte­d repeatedly by protesters who stood on chairs and shouted at him before being pulled out of the room by security guards. He did not react harshly as he often has in the past, either quietly thanking the guards or simply powering ahead in his speech.

Only days ago, Trump triggered panic within the GOP when he declined to endorse House Speaker Paul Ryan’s re-election or that of other leading Republican­s. He sought to put the dust-up to bed Friday by finally backing those candidates while also trying to move past other controvers­ies like his verbal attacks on a Muslim-American family whose son died fighting in Iraq.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump waves on Monday after delivering an economic policy speech to the Detroit Economic Club.
Associated Press Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump waves on Monday after delivering an economic policy speech to the Detroit Economic Club.

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