When the debate over the Republican tax plan began in earnest, the GOP’s talking points focused largely on the middle class. That, we now know, was rather ironic: the middle class receives modest benefits in the short term, and if the Republican plan is fully implemented, these same households face a tax hike in the long term.
But making matters slightly worse is the fact that many of those selling the regressive package also stand to benefit most from the proposal. As CNBC reported, that includes members of Congress.
Dozens of lawmakers stand to reap a tax windfall thanks to a loophole inserted in the sweeping GOP tax overhaul bill, according to a review of federal financial disclosures. […]
Those benefits will now go to roughly four dozen Republican House and Senate members who voted for the bill, according to an analysis of personal financial disclosures for CNBC by the Center for Responsive Politics. They include Sens. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, Bob Corker of Tennessee and James Inhofe of Oklahoma and Reps. Diane Black of Tennessee and Vern Buchanan of Florida.
There’s also Donald Trump’s cabinet to consider. The Guardian reported the other day on an analysis from the Center for American Progress.
Wilbur Ross, the commerce secretary; Linda McMahon, administrator of the Small Business Administration; Betsy DeVos, the education secretary; Steven Mnuchin, the treasury secretary; and Rex Tillerson, the secretary of state, will benefit to the tune of $4.5 [million] from changes to the estate tax, according to the CAP.
The same article also highlighted the effects of Republican changes to rates on “pass-through” income, which will reportedly deliver estimated annual benefits to Jared Kushner between $5 million and $12 million, and $2.7 million for Education Secretary Betsy DeVos.
And then, of course, there’s the president himself. The New York Times published this gem:
President Trump would save about $11 million on his taxes, if the new Republican tax overhaul were applied to his 2005 tax return, a New York Times analysis has found. The savings would be a roughly 30 percent cut. He would also save another $4.4 million on his eventual estate tax bill. […]









