It’s been five days since Donald Trump first declared publicly that he and congressional Republicans are working “around the clock” on a new tax cut, which would be ready no later than Nov. 1, despite the fact that Congress is effectively out of session. No one in Congress had any idea what the president was talking about, and even White House officials quietly conceded they were “mystified.”
But then something funny happened. Republicans, reluctant to admit that the emperor has no clothes, started scrambling to find fabric. The Wall Street Journal reported late yesterday:
Republicans are attempting to turn a vague tax-cut promise floated by President Trump into a campaign plank as they try to hang onto their majority in the House of Representatives. […]
“We will continue to work with the White House and Treasury over the coming weeks to develop an additional 10% tax cut focused specifically on middle-class families and workers, to be advanced as Republicans retain the House and Senate,” said Rep. Kevin Brady (R., Texas), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
Brady couldn’t just come right out and say, “Everything Trump said is gibberish,” so the Texas Republican issued a statement that subtly made clear that the proposal the president referred does not, at present, exist.
But the entire Republican apparatus apparently finds it necessary to pretend that it does exist. The president himself started adding new details to his imaginary plan, telling the Wall Street Journal that the White House has come up with a framework so that a multi-million-dollar tax break won’t add to the deficit.
“We have a way,” Trump said. “We’re going to announce it at the time. But we think we can make it revenue neutral based on certain things.”
What “things”? It’s impossible to say. Because the plan is fictional, the supporting details that bolster the plan necessarily exist only in the presidential fantasy.
But what’s especially striking about this is how often we’re confronted with similar circumstances.
The Washington Post had a great piece on this:









