Donald Trump put on his political-strategist hat this morning and offered Democrats some advice. “Democrats don’t want massive tax cuts – how does that win elections?” the president tweeted.
For now, let’s put aside the oddity of thinking Donald Trump wants to help Democrats “win elections” — as if the nation’s top GOP official is sincerely interested in the opposing party’s electoral well-being — and focus instead on the president’s confusion about public attitudes.
Consider, for example, the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, which included an interesting question: “In order to fund the government and work to make certain the economy is healthy, would you increase, decrease, or keep taxes about the same as they are now for each of the following?”
The wealthyIncrease taxes: 62%Decrease taxes: 12%
CorporationsIncrease taxes: 55%Decrease taxes: 16%
The same poll found that 42% of Americans — a pretty significant chunk of the electorate — doesn’t want Congress to cut taxes at all.
Earlier this week, the latest Washington Post/ABC News poll was released, and it found similar results: 65% of respondents said corporations should pay more in taxes. The report added, “Given what the public knows about it, [Americans] oppose Trump’s tax plan by 44-28 percent.”
In other words, the American mainstream doesn’t want tax breaks for corporations or the wealthy. Trump and congressional Republicans are pushing tax breaks for corporations or the wealthy. To borrow a phrase, “How does that win elections?”









