Plenty of presidents have left the confines of the White House, hit the road, and promoted major priorities in the hopes of rallying public support. Woodrow Wilson, for example, embarked on a tour in 1919 to help promote the League of Nations. More recently, George W. Bush held a series of events to sell Americans on the idea of Social Security privatization, which didn’t turn out well, while Barack Obama did the same in support of health care reform, which succeeded.
Donald Trump, true to form, has approached his office quite differently. Before his inauguration, and several times since, this president has organized rallies, not to promote parts of his agenda, but in order to celebrate himself.
With this in mind, today is an unusual, and arguably quite important, day in Trump’s presidency: it’s the first time he’s hosting a major public event in support of a policy priority. The Republican is headed to Missouri, where he hopes to rally Americans behind the idea of a sweeping overhaul of the nation’s tax laws.
Politico noted, however, that Trump “is not expected to go into much detail” today in the Show Me State. That’s to be expected given the president’s general disinterest in the substance of governing, but in this case, it’s not really optional: Trump can’t go into detail on the plan’s specifics because, as Bloomberg Politics reported this week, the plan doesn’t actually exist.
President Donald Trump is planning to kick off one of the most important sales pitches of his presidency this week — getting Americans fired up about rewriting the U.S. tax code.
But there’s no plan to sell. Basic questions remain unanswered. Will the changes be permanent or temporary? How will individual tax brackets be set? What rate will corporations and small businesses pay?
Instead of providing details that could help build support for a bill, the president will largely rely on the same talking points he and his advisers have highlighted since January: The middle class deserves a tax cut and businesses need changes to help them compete with global rivals.
And while “the same talking points” have appeal for the White House, Republicans have a painfully obvious problem: they know they want to tackle tax reform, but they have no idea how.









