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Kill the Bill
The Weekly Standard ^ | 6 Nov 17 | Matt Labash

Posted on 11/06/2017 7:22:24 PM PST by SkyPilot

Ask Matt Labash, who says the GOP should have called its tax reform measure the "Robbing Peter to Pay Apple Act."

Dear Matt, Republicans have called their tax bill “The Tax Cut and Jobs Act.” President Trump wanted to call it “The Cut, Cut, Cut Act” (And here we thought his specialty was branding.) What would you have named it?

H.R. Block I’d be fine with calling it “The Republicans Pissing Down Your Leg While Telling You That You’re Bathing In A Warm Mineral Spring Act.” Or maybe “The Robbing Peter to Pay Apple Act.” (In this scenario, you, the lowly individual taxpayer, are Peter. Apple is Apple.)

If you want balanced, even-keeled, somewhat optimistic analysis of the proposed tax bill, I’d hand you off to my ever-capable colleague, Chris Deaton (also the regular editor of this column). If you want to hear the anguished, soul-wracked keening of a man whose ox was just gored, pull up a chair and sit a spell. You’ve come to the right place.

For I am that unfortunate species that Republicans want to pretend doesn’t exist: the middle-class schlub who will not feel tax relief, but tax pain, even as they attempt to re-cut the tax pie so that corporations get a 43 percent tax reduction (from 35 percent to 20 percent), while my top tax rate stays the same (25 percent) and I lose the lion’s share of my itemized deductions. Meaning my taxes, unlike most corporations, are going up, even as I’ll be getting taxed at a higher rate than Apple—whose 2016 revenue was $215.6 billion.

Or put another way, Apple’s revenue alone, last year, amounted to 72 percent of the cost of all individual tax cuts in the Republicans’ $1.5 trillion plan. According to the bipartisan Committee for A Responsible Federal Budget—Remember responsible budgets? Don’t worry if you don’t, neither does former deficit hawk Paul Ryan—only roughly $300 billion of the $1.5 trillion purported tax cut is due individual taxpayers. The rest goes to business tax cuts ($1 trillion) and repeal of the estate tax ($200 billion). If you’re a multinational corporation whose obscenely rich parents just died, you’re in the money!

Even when I abstained from voting for them (which I have for three out of the last four national elections), I am that breed of Republican who endured all manner of Republican inanities—misdirected foreign adventures, ill-advised government shutdowns, Sarah Palin—reasoning that no matter how inept Republicans were (very, it turns out), at least they didn’t pick my pockets, unlike Democrats. So I patiently endured eight years of Barack Obama hiking tobacco taxes, and Medicare payroll taxes, and indoor tanning service taxes, among many others. Only to emerge from that tunnel of darkness to see a unified Republican government touch the one thing Obama didn’t touch: federal income taxes. My own faux-populist party is now hiking taxes for me, and many millions of others, in the name of their hilariously billed “tax relief” plan.

At least I think my taxes will be hiked. It’s yet to be seen, as details still need to be hammered out in committee, and legislation needs to get passed. (Republicans, thus far, have proven unable to pass so much as gas, though if they did, they’d likely claim that the fake-news liberal media smelt it/dealt it.) Plus I have not yet run the numbers by my middle-class accountant. Whose services, under the new bill, I will no longer be able to deduct on my taxes, and who Republicans seem to want to make obsolete, thus eliminating more middle-class jobs. (“The only people who won’t like this is H&R Block,” taunted faux-populist-in-chief, Donald Trump.)

Better for me, Republicans would have it, to file my taxes on a postcard at a higher rate (so simple and befitting our modern attention span!), rather than pay some frazzled numbers-cruncher a couple hundred bucks around April 15 to cut my tax burden in half by exploiting tax code deductions that help me keep a little more of the money I earned, rather than packing it off to the federal kitty. (My effective rate is usually around 12 percent, after all is said and done. Which is about to change drastically. “Simple” is not always better, as the simple-minded would have us believe.)

Aside from no longer being able to deduct most of my business expenses under the sorry excuse of “simplification”—magazine subscriptions, gas miles, jumper-cable nipple clamps for difficult interview subjects—I’m really taking a hit with the elimination of half of the state and local taxes deduction (SALT). While Trump’s pet Democrats, posing as Republicans (that means you, Gary Cohn and Steven Mnuchin), flirted with raking revenue with everything from 401(k) contributions to charitable giving (which they’ve, for now, left alone), eliminating the SALT deduction seems to be their compulsory revenue-extracting vehicle of choice to fund their massive corporate giveaway.

After enduring a lobbying outcry from the home builders and realtors of America, echoed by anguished northeastern congressional Republican heroes from blue states, like Peter King and Lee Zeldin (both of New York), Republicans have decided to leave the cherished mortgage-interest deduction alone. Sort of—they cap it at $500,000 of debt for new mortgages on “primary” homes—which doesn’t even buy you a McMansion anymore in heavily populated zip codes. Also they’ve let stand deducting property taxes. Again, sort of—they cap property-tax deductions at $10,000.

But no longer are you allowed to deduct your state income taxes on your federal form. If you listen to the dog-whistle demagoguery emanating from House Republican leaders on this issue, you’d think the only people who enjoy a SALT deduction are from wealthy, coastal blue states. (Which is disturbing enough on its own—since when do we decide national tax policy on how people vote?) But like most of what comes out of Trump and House Republicans these days, they’re full of crap. (See Trump’s repeated claims that this is the largest tax cut of all-time. It’s not. Even if their numbers are what they purport them to be, this tax cut ranks well down the list, and no higher, in terms of GDP, than two tax cuts advanced under Barack Obama.)

Every state enjoys the SALT deduction. Some less than others. While it inarguably skews towards benefitting people who live in wealthy, high-tax states (mostly blue ones), it’s not just a tax break for the wealthy, as the Tax Foundation illustrates. While 80.55 percent of people in the $100,000-$499,999 income bracket currently itemize, claiming 6.55 percent of SALT deductions as a percentage of adjusted gross income, so do 45.63 percent of people in the $50,0000-99,999 range (claiming 3.95 percent in SALT deductions as a percentage of AGI), and 19.77 percent of those in the $25,000-49,999 range (with a 2.1 SALT deduction as a percentage of AGI).

The automatonic refrain of House Republicans has become: Why should lower-tax states subsidize high-tax states who disproportionately exploit the SALT deduction? This cynical electoral creative math, of course, leaves aside Republicans’ usual fetishizing of federalism, devolution, and holding that localities are better equipped to address the needs of their citizens than is the federal government.

But sure, red staters, gloat in the fact that, say, Alaska, South Dakota, and Wyoming represent only 0.1 percent apiece of a state share of SALT deductions. As opposed to say, coastal blue states like California, New York, or New Jersey (19.6 percent, 13.3 percent, and 5.9 percent, respectively.) Good on you. Except that you also, if you’re being honest, have to calculate that state taxes present a complex multi-faceted picture. (When it comes to federal revenue, all of the sudden, conservative congresspersons are no longer pro-states’ rights.)

For instance, seven states pay no state income tax at all, five of seven of which went red in the last presidential election. And when Wallethub, a personal finance site, calculated which states were most dependent on federal funds, a contrarian picture emerges. The top five federally dependent states were Kentucky, Mississippi, New Mexico, Alabama, and West Virginia. Four out of five of which went for Trump. The five least dependent states? All SALT-deduction lovers who pay more than their fair share of federal taxes: California, Illinois, New Jersey, Minnesota, and Delaware. Five of five of which went blue in the last election.

Hate to break the news to you, Trump-loving Alabamans, but even the SALT-deducting hedge-fund manager in Greenwich isn’t the welfare queen that you are. Connecticut = the 42nd most-dependent state on federal finances. Alabama = the fourth most-dependent state. When calculating federal tax revenue by state, six out of the top ten payers are blue states. So despite Republicans’ haste to punish coastal blue states, who suffer higher costs of living/state taxes, and therefore benefit disproportionately from taking SALT deductions, exactly who is subsidizing who is a very open question.

I’m not always happy about living in the People’s Republic of Maryland. For instance, we’re one of the few states with a “flush tax”: a tax for flushing our toilet, ostensibly to restore the Chesapeake Bay. (I’m a devoted fisherman, but presumably, stripers are catching toilet paper runoff in the face whether I pay my taxes or don’t.) And we love our SALT deductions. But even here, we’re still less federally dependent than red states like Georgia, Louisiana, and Montana. If House Republicans still don’t want to acknowledge that reality, maybe all us blue-state dwellers can move to Mississippi, and drive their costs of living to hell, too.

Of course, SALT-deducters aren’t the only ones getting screwed. Read the tax-plan analysis roundups, such as this or this, and it’s pretty clear that homebuilders, plenty of small-business owners, charities, people who adopt children, teachers expensing their classroom supplies, disaster-victims, and rare-disease sufferers are getting hosed, too. And that’s to name but a few sufferers under the Republican plan for “tax relief.”

But at least we can all agree on the winners: corporate giants like Apple. Of the top five richest companies in America—Apple, Alphabet (Google’s parent company), Microsoft, Berkshire Hathaway, and Amazon—their most recent effective tax rates are 25.8 percent, 19.35 percent, 17.64 percent, 19.35 percent, and 27.45 percent, all well below the current 35 percent statutory rate. And this is without the House Republican bill. Yet while the top individual tax rate remains at 39.6 percent, even as Apple and co’s. rate will be dropped to 20 percent while they keep most of their deductions, unlike you and me, the sky is the limit on how far they can go. I can’t wait to see what Trump’s new populist tax plan has in store for working stiffs like Apple! Maybe they can finally reinforce those suicide nets at their iPhone sweatshops in China.


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: gop; postcard; simplify; specialinterest; taxbill; taxes; taxhike; taxraise; transparency
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To: Mariner
I’m a little over that threshold and single.

Lost deductions mean my taxes go up several thousand dollars/yr


Do you make about or more than 150k, single without providing for others as dependents, and live in a high tax state like California?

I can see your personal taxes going up if you've been deducting CA's SALT.
81 posted on 11/07/2017 6:14:41 AM PST by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began.)
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To: xzins

“If they kill this bill they kill the presidency of DJ Trump.”

That’s a defeatist attitude.

Trump’s supporters stick with him.

It’s the Republican Congress that is in jeopardy, and rightfully so.

The corrupt bastards are downright anti-American. And anti-Trump through and through.


82 posted on 11/07/2017 6:19:19 AM PST by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: SkyPilot

If a business can’t consider its real expenses as expenses, then it won’t stay in business very long.

That said, and we’ll probably never agree on this, but you are too good a FRiend to dwell on it.

The important issues for this country are not economic, in my opinion, but spiritual. Satan killed Christians on Sunday, so the blood of the martyrs highlight for us another danger that gets ignored. The hatred for Christians I’ve seen from atheists is akin to the hatred I see from antifa, socialists, and anti-semites. These groups appear to be interwoven.

A recent court nominee by the president was attacked during her confirmation over her religion. A WW1 monument from generations ago was ruled illegal because it had a cross on it. Coaches are forbidden to listen if their teams pray on their own.

God is in control of the rise and fall of kings. I believe we are near our last chance in the same way as good King Josiah was Judah’s last chance.

Getting back to God is more important than taxes, and if we get a good king, we should try to get him to focus with us on godliness. If we do, I think the other things will take care of themselves. We meed this king for 7 more years and not just for 3.


83 posted on 11/07/2017 6:22:53 AM PST by xzins (Retired US Army chaplain. Support our troops by praying for their victory. L)
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To: af_vet_1981

I’ve voted Republican in every election since 1976.

If this bill passes, and the final version increases my taxes, I will do everything in my power to ensure they are unelected.

And I believe there are millions like me.


84 posted on 11/07/2017 6:25:55 AM PST by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: Mariner
this bill passes, and the final version increases my taxes, I will do everything in my power to ensure they are unelected.

So go already; leave and go join wealthy California Democrats for your personal gain.
85 posted on 11/07/2017 6:32:33 AM PST by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began.)
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To: af_vet_1981

Again, you demonstrate your Social Justice Warrior core.


86 posted on 11/07/2017 6:45:06 AM PST by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: Mariner

There is a group of globalist republicans in the senate that I think numbers at least half. They intend to see that Trump does not succeed. They need only 3 votes to kill anything, and my theory will be proven correct if they kill this tax bill. The easy 3 are McCain, Flaje, and Corker. They’re not even running again, so the other senators can hide behind them.

Watch actions and not stated beliefs. A vote against is a vote against no matter what they say about their ideals, priciples, etc..


87 posted on 11/07/2017 7:00:55 AM PST by xzins (Retired US Army chaplain. Support our troops by praying for their victory. L)
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To: Mariner
It seems to me you are the Social Justice Warrior, incessantly whining, complaining, and threatening the nation over your personal tax situation, even though you have demonstrably more than most.

So leave already, your money is more important than your nation.
88 posted on 11/07/2017 7:03:10 AM PST by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began.)
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To: SkyPilot

Ah yes...Mr “I’m Going to Lose a Deduction” attacks the tax plan.

Why is any tax reform tough? Because there are always winners and lowers, and those losing scream far harder than those winning. So we stay stuck with horrible tax law.


89 posted on 11/07/2017 7:08:30 AM PST by Mr Rogers (Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools)
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To: af_vet_1981

“So leave already, your money is more important than your nation. “

You believe a tax increase on the middle class is good for the nation.


90 posted on 11/07/2017 7:11:32 AM PST by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: Mariner
I think you complain too much about your own wealth and project it on others. If your personal tax rate is the most important thing in your world, you are not middle class,

but rather very poor.
91 posted on 11/07/2017 7:24:11 AM PST by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began.)
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To: kelly4c
Do you think being a good conservative means espousing unlimited greed?

Why do you ask? Is someone here doing that?

Seems like a morally judgemental question you're asking. It's also off-topic.

92 posted on 11/07/2017 7:35:02 AM PST by Windflier (Pitchforks and torches ripen on the vine. Left too long, they become black rifles.)
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To: SkyPilot

OR we could cut entitlements such as welfare, food stamps, Medicaid and cut duplicate programs that cost billions, cut unnecessary departments such as the Dept of Energy and Education and others and demand performance and accountability from corporations with government contracts, especially Dept of Defense.


93 posted on 11/07/2017 8:12:35 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants (Conservatives love America for what it is. Liberals hate America for the same reason.)
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To: xzins

I completely agree with your assessment regarding the state of spiritual warfare, both on an individual and national basis. I will continue to pray for our nation, and for President Trump. We need him.


94 posted on 11/07/2017 9:42:07 AM PST by SkyPilot ("I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." John 14:6)
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To: Mariner

Haven’t checked but my taxes would go up without the state income tax deduction. But it shouldn’t matter what my taxes do, the investment economy is more important than any one or group deduction which typically only affects spending (or affects nothing).


95 posted on 11/07/2017 3:56:20 PM PST by palmer (...if we do not have strong families and strong values, then we will be weak and we will not survive)
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To: af_vet_1981

With my Tubo tax last year I only paid 7.06%!


96 posted on 11/07/2017 4:07:48 PM PST by Davy Crocket
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To: familyop

There’s a link to the tax calculator in comment #56.

My taxes will go up under this plan! Did the calc last year with Turbo tax I only paid 7.06%


97 posted on 11/07/2017 4:10:47 PM PST by Davy Crocket
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To: SkyPilot
"And your point of pointing to that "calculator" is.....what?"

To allow readers to find out for themselves.

"Do you simply choose to ignore those who state (even by using it) that they are going to pay a lot more?"

No. I read the complaints.

"Or do you only care that this passes, because you see yourself as one of the "winners" in this sham of a bill?"

No. The deductions for special interests need to go, though. That's the conservative way. If we're going to cut taxes, simply cut tax rates. The complicated tax system and its many socialist parasites are another part of big, socialist spending


98 posted on 11/07/2017 5:06:44 PM PST by familyop ("Welcome to Costco. I love you." --Costco greeter in the movie, "Idiocracy")
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To: SkyPilot

The medical and insurance rackets are stealing everyone blind except for socialist special interests. Same with the real estate and mortgage racket. It’s time to unplug them and let the economy grow. We can no longer support the Borg.


99 posted on 11/07/2017 5:37:21 PM PST by familyop ("Welcome to Costco. I love you." --Costco greeter in the movie, "Idiocracy")
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To: SkyPilot

Where I wrote:
If we’re going to cut taxes, simply cut tax rates.

Expanding the standard deduction will do for now. That’s a simplification. After the special interest deductions are gone, then cut rates.

And no VAT tax of any kind—ever. No added tax schemes like that will be tolerated.


100 posted on 11/07/2017 5:43:55 PM PST by familyop ("Welcome to Costco. I love you." --Costco greeter in the movie, "Idiocracy")
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