Donald Trump hasn’t unveiled the details of his tax plan, but as Bloomberg News reported over the weekend, the former president is starting to let the public know about his intentions — and who’d benefit from his plans.
Donald Trump pledged to double down on tax cuts if he wins a second term as president, drawing a distinction with President Joe Biden who has called for tax hikes on businesses and the richest Americans. … Trump’s comments on Saturday shed some more light on his emphasis on cutting taxes across the board, including for top earners and businesses.
At a rally in New Jersey, the presumptive Republican nominee boasted about an apparent across-the-board tax cut, which would include “big” new tax breaks for the “upper class” and the “business class.”
Trump pledges to give the biggest tax cut in history to billionaires and millionaires. pic.twitter.com/E8kLIaWbyV
— Ron Filipkowski (@RonFilipkowski) May 11, 2024
For those who keep an eye on Trump’s rhetoric in general, the comments weren’t altogether surprising. It was, after all, late last year when he told attendees at a Mar-a-Lago event, “You’re rich as hell. … We’re gonna give you tax cuts.” Soon after, he told Fox News he was interested in another round of tax breaks for corporations.
The Washington Post published a related report in the fall, noting that Team Trump was “plotting an aggressive new set of tax cuts,” including “deeper cuts to both individual and corporate tax rates.”
It’s worth emphasizing for context that the presumptive GOP nominee and his team aren’t talking about replacing their 2017 tax policy. On the contrary, they’re determined to keep those tax breaks in place — including extending the measures that are set to expire — and then keep going with even more cuts.
The fact that Trump’s 2017 package was a failure is an inconvenient detail that much of the political world chooses to overlook.
How would Trump pay for another round of tax breaks? He hasn’t said, and that almost certainly won’t change. In fact, if recent history is any guide, the former president and his allies would simply put the cost of the tax cuts on the national credit card, without regard for the budget deficits that his party occasionally pretends to care about.
Wouldn’t this make inflation worse? Probably, though Republicans don’t much appear to care about that, either.
But as Trump makes this an explicit part of his 2024 pitch, it’s especially important to appreciate the politics surrounding the larger conversation.








