By Brian Maher
This post Trump Seeks Deal With Democrats? appeared first on Daily Reckoning.
The recent Syria fireworks have thrown diversionary smoke over Trump’s faltering domestic agenda.
But the clearing smoke reveals trouble for another key plank of Trump’s agenda — just like health care reform…
We refer of course to tax reform.
On the campaign trail Trump pledged he’d “cut the hell out of taxes.”
But the Associated Press reports that now Trump’s “going back to the drawing board in a search for Republican consensus behind legislation to overhaul the U.S. tax system.”
White House officials now concede it’s “unlikely” that Trump will get it done by the August deadline Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin established.
The AP:
Administration officials say it’s now unlikely that a tax overhaul will meet the August deadline set by Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin. But the ambitious pace to figure out a plan reflects Trump’s haste to move quickly past a bruising failure to broker a compromise within his own party on how to replace the health insurance law enacted under President Barack Obama.
A divided Republican Party did in health care reform. It could also do in tax reform…
The Republicans’ Freedom Caucus — which played the Old Scratch with House Speaker Ryan’s Obamacare replacement bill — will likely demand entitlement cuts along with tax cuts.
Trump can cut taxes to Kingdom Come. But without offsetting spending cuts, the deficit goes to the same place.
And that’s the gripe of the Freedom Caucus.
But Trump said he’s not touching entitlements.
So will Trump bypass the Freedom Caucus to score a win on tax reform?
Our agents tell us that administration officials have been making eyes at House Democrats.
Woo enough Democrats and Trump might be able to work around the Freedom Caucus.
And he could finally put a legislative feather in his “Make America Great Again” cap.
But is it realistic?
The Tax Policy Center whinges that Trump’s current tax plan delivers half the cuts to the top 1% of households.
And if Trump looks to the Democrats for tax reform, that means a lot fewer corporate tax cuts and tax cuts for “the rich.”
“Tax reform’s got to be responsible and it’s got to be progressive,” says Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Maryland), setting the terms.
Rep. Richard Neal (D-Massachusetts), top Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee, draws his own line in the sand:
“If they’re going to talk about some middle-class tax relief, we certainly want to engage. If this is a redo of the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003, that’s a nonstarter.”
But it’s an offer many Republicans might well refuse.
The Wall Street Journal:
Democrats are starting to settle on a price for participating in a tax-code overhaul, and many Republicans won’t want to pay it… Lower tax rates on businesses, investors and top earners are a unifying force in the GOP, and many lawmakers are reluctant to give that up to get a deal with Democrats.
Another impasse, if true.
And more cold water on the Trump “reflation trade.”
There may be some common ground on middle-class tax …read more
Source:: Daily Reckoning feed
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