Republicans sparred over taxes and the minimum wage in the second presidential debate Wednesday night, with Donald Trump an unlikely advocate for progressive taxation. But the brief exchanges at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, Calif. underscored more than anything how the improving economy is giving the GOP little real ammunition against Democrats.
In the undercard debate for lower-polling candidates, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum made an impassioned case for raising the minimum wage. “Most of (American workers) are wage earners,” Santorum said, “and Republicans are losing elections because we’re not talking about them.”
Sen. Rand Paul and Dr. Ben Carson both embraced the idea of a flat tax, in which everyone pays the same percentage of their income. Carson said making richer people pay a higher rate, as our system has always done, is “socialism.”
But Trump, the Republican front-runner in the polls, said a flat tax wouldn’t make the super-rich pay as much as they should. He said he planned to soon announce a tax plan that would involve a major reduction for the middle class.
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“The hedge fund guys wont like me as much as they like me right now,” Trump, a real-estate mogul and entertainer, added. “They’ll pay more. But I know people that are making a tremendous amount of money and paying virtually no taxes, and I think its unfair.”
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, meanwhile, said he’d scrap all taxes on production, and instead institute a consumption tax, which he called a “fair tax.”
“Why should we penalize productivity?” Huckabee asked.
In his concluding remarks, Bush painted a bleak economic picture, noting that the poverty rate has grown under President Obama and middle class income has declined. He called for a “strategy of high-sustained economic growth,” citing his pledge to grow the economy at a rate of 4% per year. He said he’d do that by reforming the tax code, fixing the “broken regulatory system,” reducing the deficit and passing immigration reform.
“Without a high growth strategy, our country will never have the resources or the optimism to be able to lead the world,” Bush said.
Earlier this week, Bush announced a tax “reform” plan that would raise some taxes on hedge fund managers, but, analysts said, would give the majority of its benefits to the rich.
Taxes aside, Carson and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker clashed briefly over the minimum wage. Carson, a former neurosurgeon who is running directly behind Trump in most polls, said he’d like to see negotiations to establish a “reasonable” minimum, and index it to inflation “so we never have to have this conversation again in the history of the world.”
Walker disagreed.
“The best way to help people see their wages go up is to get them the education and skills they need to take on careers that pay far more than the minimum wage,” he said, laying out a menu of tax cuts, education and training and energy development.
Walker, who this week unveiled a plan to curb the already waning power of organized labor, added that he intended to repeal Obamacare—a subject that was barely raised by the candidates throughout the evening.








