Trump's
economic plan: no 'death tax', less business tax,
and fewer regulations
Republican presidential nominee also proposed
allowing parents to fully deduct the average cost of
childcare from their taxable income in a Detroit
speech
Posted August
09, 2016
August 08,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Guardian"
- In an attempt to reset a campaign recently
flogged by a series of controversies,
Donald Trump outlined an economic vision for the
US, including dramatically slashing taxes, and took
sharp aim at Hillary Clinton.
In a nearly
hour-long speech, unusually reading from a
teleprompter, the Republican presidential nominee
suggested Detroit itself was an example of “the
living, breathing example of my opponent’s failed
economic agenda”.
“The
unemployment rate [in Detroit] is more than twice
the national average,” Trump said. “Half of all
Detroit residents do not work. Detroit tops the list
of the most dangerous cities in terms of violent
crime. These are the silenced victims whose stories
are never told by Hillary Clinton.”
Trump said
his economic plan would reverse a lagging recovery
in jobs from the 2008 recession, in part by reducing
income tax brackets from seven levels to three – of
12%, 25%, and 33% – and entirely eliminating income
taxes for individuals who earn less than $25,000
annually, or $50,000 for a married couple. That’s a
change from September 2015, when he initially
proposed four brackets that would pay zero, 10%, 20%
and 25%. He said it would mark the “biggest tax
revolution since the Reagan tax reform”.
“We will
make America grow again,” Trump said to applause.
In
addition, Trump said he would lower corporate tax
rates from 40% to 15% – a rate he said punished
“companies for making products in America”.
This,
ladies and gentleman, is backwards – it’s
backwards,” he said. “All of our policies should be
geared towards keeping jobs and wealth inside the
United States.
“No
American company will pay more than 15% of their
business income in taxes,” he continued. Clinton’s
economic vision entailed “onerous regulations”,
which would put small companies “totally out of
business, and you won’t be able to start – you could
never, ever start – a small business under the
tremendous regulatory burden that you have today in
our country.”
Trump also
said he would eliminate the estate tax, which
currently applies to estates larger than $5.45m for
individuals, or $10.9m for married couples.
“No family
will have to pay the death tax,” he said.
Trump’s
speech began with a few hiccups. Throughout his
remarks, several protesters interrupted the
candidate before being whisked away by security. The
economic club’s attendees booed, jeered and cheered,
and at one point delivered a standing ovation for
Trump following the interruptions. “Go home!” one
attendee shouted; “We love you, Donald,” said
another.
The remarks
were delivered inside a ballroom of Cobo Hall in
downtown Detroit, before 1,500 members and guests of
the prestigious Detroit Economic Club, a business
and professional organization that routinely serves
as a stop for presidential candidates. About 100
anti-Trump protesters marched around Washington
Boulevard outside the hall while chanting “Dump
Trump”.
The
specifications of the economic plan appeared to
mimic proposals offered last fall by his campaign
and later highlighted on his campaign’s website. In
March, the group Citizens for Tax Justice said
his plan would cost more than $12tn. Trump also
reiterated his opposition to the Trans-Pacific
Partnership and his plan to ask TransCanada to renew
the permit for the Keystone pipeline.
The newest
proposals included a temporary moratorium on
regulations from federal agencies. He pitched a plan
to allow families to “fully deduct” all childcare
expenses from their taxes, which he said would
“reduce cost in childcare, offering much needed
relief to American families”.
The speech
was viewed as a chance to reboot Trump’s flailing
campaign, following a week that saw the candidate
vehemently push back against criticism from the
family of a Muslim soldier who died in Iraq, and as
the leader of the American Nazi party proclaimed him
presidency as
a “real opportunity”. His standing in polls
across the US fell in tandem, including in Michigan,
where Clinton opened up
a near double-digit lead this week. And on
Monday, a little-known CIA operative and Republican,
Evan McMullin, announced his third-party run for
president, presenting himself as
a conservative choice for “millions of disaffected
Americans”.
Trump’s
running mate, Indiana governor Mike Pence, made a
surprise appearance to introduce Trump on Monday,
saying the candidate was in Detroit to deliver what
“so many American leaders have done at this very
podium”.
“You will
hear your keynote speaker outline a vision, a new
economic vision to make America great again,” Pence
said to applause.
Both
Clinton and Trump view Michigan as vital to their
campaign, and the Democratic nominee is set to
follow her opponent with an economic speech, also in
Detroit, on Thursday.
Clinton, on
a two-day campaign swing through the battleground
state of Florida, spurned Trump’s economic agenda as
a repackaging of Republicans’ old policies.
“Trickle-down economics does not help our economy
grow,” Clinton said during a rally in St Petersburg,
Florida, on Monday. “It does not help the vast
majority of Americans, but it does really well for
people already at the top.”
She said
his tax plans will “give super big tax breaks to
large corporations and the really wealthy”, while
casting herself as a champion for small businesses.
“We’re going to make the wealthy pay their fair
share,” she said, drawing cheers from the crowd. “I
am not going to raise taxes on the middle class, but
with your help we are going to raise it on the
wealthy.”
She also took a swing at Trump’s new team of
economic advisers, dismissing them as “hedge fund
guys, billionaire guys, six guys named Steve,
apparently”.
Before
Trump’s speech, the congresswoman Debbie Dingell
said she was looking forward to the speech, “because
it’s really important to hear all the candidates.
I’ve always done that.”
“That’s
what democracy is – it’s hearing from those
candidates,” said Dingell, a board member of the
economic club and Democrat who represents Michigan
in the US House. “It’s understanding those
candidates. So I want to see what he has to say.”
Others
weren’t as interested.
“Really?”
said Valerie Kindle, a retired worker for the state
of Michigan who lives in the city of Eastpointe,
about 20 minutes north-east of Detroit. “This person
has been unstable since the very beginning. I’ve
never seen … a campaign ran as he ran his. We’re
Americans – we don’t tear each other down like
that.”
“Now why,
why should we support [him]?” Kindle continued. “Has
the United States come to that level? Where we
really want the scum of the earth to represent us?”
Lauren Gambino contributed reporting from New
York.
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