Grover Norquist responded on Fox News to Warren Buffett’s recent op-ed in The New York Times advocating for higher income tax rates and a minimum tax on top earners. Not surprisingly, the anti-tax crusader Norquist brushed off as “silly” the notion that raising taxes could help to reduce the deficit or curb increasing inequality.
In his op-ed, billionaire Buffett argued that marginal tax rates have never, in his experience, dissuaded anyone from a good business investment. In other words, investors aren’t likely to pass on a killer opportunity because its gains will put them in a higher tax bracket. “Only in Grover Norquist’s imagination,” wrote Buffett, does such an investor exist.
Norquist doesn’t believe that it’s all in his head:
“If [Buffett] thinks that the government can take a dollar, and then you go to an investor who doesn’t have that dollar and it doesn’t affect investment–I’m sorry, that’s just silly,” Norquist told Fox News on Monday. “When the government takes a dollar away from the American people, or a trillion dollars, that’s a trillion dollars not available to be saved and invested. And, I’m sorry if Buffett can’t see that, but that’s kind of silly on his part.”
Norquist said nothing about where the American people’s “dollar” would go once the government collects it as revenue.
For his part, Buffett entreated Norquist and his devotees to “forget about the rich and ultrarich going on strike and stuffing their ample funds under their mattresses if—gasp—capital gains rates and ordinary income rates are increased. The ultrarich, including me,” Buffett wrote, “will forever pursue investment opportunities.”









