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New York Times Sees ‘Long Odds’ of Tax Cut Success for Doomed GOP
Newsbusters.org ^ | December 22, 2017 | Clay Waters

Posted on 12/22/2017 7:15:21 PM PST by Kaslin

The Republican tax plan may have passed Congress and been signed by President Trump, but that’s not stopping the New York Times from slamming it as a fairy tale that will doom the GOP in the 2018 congressional elections. In the process the paper made some bold anti-Republican predictions that can be checked next year, as the consequences of the tax bill wind through the economy and the political landscape The Republican tax plan may have passed Congress and been signed by President Trump, but that’s not stopping the New York Times from slamming it as a fairy tale that will doom the GOP in the 2018 congressional elections. In the process the paper made some bold anti-Republican predictions that can be checked next year, as the consequences of the tax bill wind through the economy and the political landscape

When President Trump adds his distinctive signature to the tax bill, he will also be making a huge bet that the Republican strategy of deep cuts for businesses and wealthy individuals will fuel extraordinary growth across the board.

....

If they are proved correct, they will be repudiating not only historical experience, but most experts. From Congress’s own prognosticators to Wall Street’s virtuosos, scarcely any independent analyses project anything like the rosy forecasts offered by the president’s top economic advisers.

....

[Goldman Sachs] annual growth estimate of 2.5 percent for 2018 matched the one issued this week by the nation’s central bank, the Federal Reserve, while the latest median Wall Street forecast hovered close by. And in 2019, growth is expected to drop to 1.8 percent, Alec Phillips, chief United States political economist for Goldman, said Wednesday after the Senate vote.

“We note that the effect in 2020 and beyond looks minimal and could actually be slightly negative,” the company said in a recent published summary.

Such projections are unlikely to deter Mr. Trump and Republican leaders from declaring success next year. Lower taxes and extra incentives to invest in 2018 are almost certain to encourage consumers to spend and businesses to expand.

Reduced rates mean most Americans will start taking home more money right away. Roughly three-quarters of taxpayers are expected to get a cut next year, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center.

But, but! Cohen insisted that while  good things might happen temporarily, bad things would definitely transpire:

But like a shot of adrenaline, that initial burst of economic activity is likely to fade.

....

Over time, most of the broad-based tax cuts will disappear. Although the richest sliver of Americans will continue to get a break, most people who earn less than $100,000 will see their taxes rise, which could slow the economy’s primary engine, consumer spending.

Further tightening is likely if the Republicans follow through on sharply cutting Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and other programs that tend to put extra cash into the pockets of lower and moderate-income households.

Either way, the deficit will continue to balloon....

Friday’s front page featured reporter Jonathan Martin, who rarely has an encouraging word for Republicans, staying true to form: “For G.O.P., Tax Law Is a Salve, But Hardly a Cure-All for 2018.”

The sweeping tax overhaul approved by Congress this week hands Republicans a long-sought achievement they believe will bolster their defenses in next year’s midterm campaign, but party officials concede the measure may only mitigate their losses in what is shaping up to be a punishing election year.

While the tax legislation is broadly unpopular as it reaches President Trump’s desk, the bill offers Republicans the sort of signature accomplishment they have been lacking to galvanize their demoralized donors and many of their voters.

....

Yet with voters indicating by wide margins they prefer Democrats to control Congress and bestowing Mr. Trump with historically low approval ratings, the tax plan is hardly a panacea for Republican lawmakers on the ballot in 2018. At best, it is the political equivalent of tacking up plywood against exterior windows to lessen the inevitable damage of an impending storm.

Officials in both parties believe Democratic gains in the House, where Republicans enjoy a 24-seat majority, could reach as high as 40 seats if the political environment does not improve for the Republicans.

And, as of now, it only appears to be worsening.

Friday’s Times also ran with a dispatch from a Maryland town built on socialism, er “egalitarian pillars”: “Egalitarian Town Worries About What’s Next,” by Tara Siegel Bernard.

The word “equality” carries special meaning in this planned community, nestled in the corridor between Baltimore and Washington.

Subsidized apartment complexes and tidy townhouses coexist with single-family colonials and split- levels, and racial, socio-economic and religious diversity is embedded in the fabric. Columbia’s founding father created the town in 1967 with hopes that all types of workers could afford to live there, “from the company janitor to the company president.”

It is through this lens that residents here are viewing the tax plan that Congress finalized this week. Even as people here try to assess how the new code will affect them individually, many are expressing greater concerns about the “knock-on” or secondary effects of the plan, which down the line could reduce or eliminate spending in some areas to pay for tax breaks for businesses and the wealthiest Americans.

In Columbia, that could mean cuts to the well-regarded public schools and aid programs for the most vulnerable residents, changes that would further chip away at the egalitarian pillars on which the town was built.

....

President Trump has advertised the new plan as a “massive tax cut” for working and middle-class Americans, while Republican leaders in Congress promise it will create jobs and simplify the tax code. At the same time, the plan is expected to add at least $1 trillion to the deficit and increase health insurance premiums; the number of uninsured people could rise by millions.

And Republican lawmakers have already signaled that they will call for cuts to popular entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security.

Slowing entitlement growth (not necessarily actual “cuts” in spending) has been bandied about by House Speaker Paul Ryan, but were not part of the tax plan just signed into law.

To a retiree like Sharonlee Vogel, who lives in the Long Reach village in Columbia, those types of changes are distressing. She had personal concerns -- including the curtailed tax break on state and local taxes -- but she was more upset about how it would hurt middle- and lower-income families and the fraying safety net.

The safety net has been “fraying” in Timesland for a generation without actually ripping apart.

Bernard has previously attacked a proposed slight reduction of entitlement spending as hurting “the old and poor.”


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: 115th; 2018congressional; 2018midterms; economy; jonathanmartin; media; msm; newyork; newyorkslimes; newyorktimes; patriciacohen; taxes; trumptaxcuts
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To: treetopsandroofs

What are they going to say if the economy takes off and people get more of their money back via tax cuts? Are they still going to be able to fight REALITY with lies?


21 posted on 12/22/2017 7:41:11 PM PST by snarkytart
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To: Kaslin

How stupid are these people? Or worse, how stupid do these people think we are???


22 posted on 12/22/2017 7:41:37 PM PST by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: Kaslin

They are a sad sack of idiots who can’t see anything but their hatred for this man, President Trump!


23 posted on 12/22/2017 7:42:23 PM PST by frnewsjunkie
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To: Kaslin

Ah, when they said “experts” the name Krugman didn’t come to mind at first. Don’t they have to be right about something before we get to call them “experts” or is a Crackerjack box Nobel Prize good enough?


24 posted on 12/22/2017 7:43:28 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: Kaslin

They could be right. The full effect of the cuts may not kick in before the elections. And you can count on the Enemedia to whip up every conceivable negative nightmare concerning the cuts for the next 11 months. It’ll be non-stop “Trickle Down” propaganda on steroids.


25 posted on 12/22/2017 7:44:20 PM PST by Bernard Marx
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To: Kaslin
The New York Times still doesn't get it.

President Trump championed the tax cut to help the American people. It has nothing to do with the Republican party.

President Trump wasn't "betting" or "scheming" to advance the Republican Party or its agenda (whatever that is …). President Trump's only goal is to Make America Great Again.
 

26 posted on 12/22/2017 7:51:04 PM PST by Governor Dinwiddie (CNN is fake news.)
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To: neverevergiveup

If they were experts they wouldn’t be pontificators, they’d be wealthy.


27 posted on 12/22/2017 8:02:21 PM PST by TiGuy22
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To: Kaslin

Here’s a guy I’ve known for a few years
https://www.fa-mag.com/news/market-rally-will-continue-in-2018—t—rowe-price-managers-say-35718.html?print


28 posted on 12/22/2017 8:04:44 PM PST by Vendome (I've Gotta Be Me - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wH-pk2vZG2M)
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To: Trump20162020
...we all recall what happened in 2010 during Obama’s second year in the White House.

AND Clintons in 1994.

The 2 biggest shellackings in history

29 posted on 12/22/2017 8:07:16 PM PST by digger48
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The graveyard is full of politicians who wants to raise taxes...tax cutters win 49 seat landslides...NYT remembers the 1980’s quite well,,,scared thatll happen again


30 posted on 12/22/2017 8:09:40 PM PST by basalt (ut, the leeches will soon get notices that "sorry,)
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To: digger48

both raised taxes...


31 posted on 12/22/2017 8:11:01 PM PST by basalt (ut, the leeches will soon get notices that "sorry,)
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To: stylin19a

HOW MANY TIMES CAN ONE INDIVIDUAL HUMAN BE PROVEN WRONG IN ONE LIFETIME?!?!?!


32 posted on 12/22/2017 8:24:35 PM PST by dp0622 (The Left should know that if Trump is kicked out of office, it is WAR!)
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To: stylin19a

BTW, does he have a nobel prize too like obama.

Sounds like a candidate.


33 posted on 12/22/2017 8:25:01 PM PST by dp0622 (The Left should know that if Trump is kicked out of office, it is WAR!)
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To: snarkytart

They’ll give Obama credit.


34 posted on 12/22/2017 8:25:09 PM PST by dhs12345
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To: Trump20162020
...even though we all recall what happened in 2010 during Obama’s second year in the White House

I would caution republicans to be careful about gloating about that 2010 success that got the republicans the majority.

That victory came as a result of the "sacrifice" that democrats were willing to make to get their longest running wet dream passed. Universal health care was something that they were willing to give their souls in order to get it into law. So, though they knew that ACA was very unpopular, they decided that it was still worth sacrificing their majority in order to get it done. And that's how republicans were "able" to win the majority in congress. Democrats were willing to "cross that bridge" when they got to it. That bridge was not passable, but they still got one of their biggest programs and wet-dreams into law.

Republicans don't have the same scenario with the tax cuts, but democrats are going to try to try to turn it into the same kind of earth-shaking/apocalyptic event that took them out of control of congress. With success, which can't fail, tax cuts can take democrats further into the depths of losers-ville.

IN any case, it's worth noting that democrats are still very bitter about 2010, and again, 2016, and will do whatever it takes to with congress and the presidency back. It's why the phony Trump/Russia dossier was fabricated by the DNC andn Hillary and the Obama administration, with the help of the fusionGPS spy-gang.
35 posted on 12/22/2017 8:25:47 PM PST by adorno
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To: Kaslin

They should add a Voluntary Contribution Line to the 1040 Form like they did in MA.

Both John Kerry and Lieawatha Warren declined to pay the higher “voluntary” Tax Rate. They could have paid 5.75%, but chose to pay the standard 5.20% Rate. Cheap SOB’s.

At least Lieawatha didn’t hide her Canoe in Rhode Island to avoid paying Wampum to the Paleface MA Taxman.


36 posted on 12/22/2017 8:27:15 PM PST by Kickass Conservative (Islamophobia, a word created by fascists, and used by cowards, to manipulate morons.)
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To: Kaslin

They are so called “experts” that’s all. That doesn’t make them experts though. ................................ Typical Democrat titles for their people. If you register as a Democrat you become an instant a genius, because there is no one smarter than they are. Your success and degrees mean nothing unless you are one of them.


37 posted on 12/22/2017 9:26:52 PM PST by Bringbackthedraft (Damn, the tag line disappeared again? Coursors!)
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To: Bernard Marx

withholding changes start in February, that is real money not media bs


38 posted on 12/22/2017 9:33:20 PM PST by italianquaker
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To: Kaslin
but most experts...and that would be Economists.....

Whose Trivia Quiz has 400 questions

and a thousand answers.

39 posted on 12/22/2017 11:03:33 PM PST by spokeshave (FBI = Feral Bureau of Insurrection)
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To: Kaslin

We have 28 billion scheduled in foreign aid for 2018. Cut the aid President Trump Before you cut SS and other programs for Americans!!!


40 posted on 12/23/2017 1:40:12 AM PST by MarMema (I now choose to live my life as a heterosexual married woman)
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