Dem Rep Neal: Tax Code ‘Far Too Complex’ – But GOP Plan ‘Unfair,’ ‘Would Further Rig the Tax Code’

During Friday’s Democratic Weekly Address, Representative Richard Neal (D-MA) stated that the tax code is “far too complex,” and said that while there are “a few” things in the Republican tax plan that Democrats could support, the GOP plan as a whole “is simply unfair, and would further rig the tax code for the rich.”

Transcript as Follows:

“Hi, I’m Congressman Richard Neal, representing Massachusetts’s first Congressional District and the Ranking Member of the House Ways and Means Committee.

In the coming weeks, the House of Representatives will begin a conversation about reforming our nation’s tax code, which hasn’t been overhauled in more than 30 years.

Both Democrats and Republicans agree that something must be done to simplify our tax system. Our current tax code is far too complex, riddled with unnecessary loopholes that allow some to avoid paying their fair share, and unfair to American businesses trying to compete in an increasingly globalized economy. While both Democrats and Republicans agree that tax reform is needed, we have very different views about what our tax system should look like.

Two weeks ago, Republican leaders and President Trump released a tax framework that they say is the starting point for their forthcoming tax reform proposal. While there are a few ideas that Democrats might be able to support, we believe that the Republican tax cut framework failed to live up to the test that President Trump himself set for his tax plan when he said it would be focused on the middle class.

Democrats believe that the Republican tax plan is simply unfair, and would further rig the tax code for the rich.

Under the Republican plan, tax revenues from individuals would RISE by over $2 trillion dollars, while revenue from corporations would DROP by over $6 trillion dollars – this means more of the tax burden will be shifted from big corporations to working families. Asking the American people to foot the bill for trillions in tax cuts for big corporations is wrong. Democrats are looking for a tax plan that begins and ends with middle class families.

According to the non-partisan Tax Policy Center, 80 percent of the tax cuts in the Republican plan would go to the top 1 percent. Put another way, 99 percent of the taxpayers in this country would be left fighting over just 20 percent of the tax cuts. Even worse, economists at the Tax Policy Center warned in their report that nearly 30 percent of middle class families would even see a tax increase. At a time when American families are working harder than ever but haven’t seen a pay raise in years, any tax plan that raises taxes on the middle class family is a non-starter for Democrats.

Finally, the Republican plan would not be good for our economy. Under their proposal, trillions of dollars would be added to the deficit just to give tax cuts to those at the very top. In 2001 and 2003, Congress passed trillions of dollars in unpaid-for tax cuts that disproportionally benefitted the richest families in this country. President Bush told the American people those tax cuts for the rich would pay for themselves. That didn’t happen. Our economy became saddled with trillions of dollars in debt that dragged down economic growth and job creation.

Democrats believe that there’s a better way. We believe that the American people deserve a tax code founded on fairness – one that rewards hard-working, middle class families, small businesses and innovators, while ensuring that no one, no matter how well-connected or wealthy they are, can avoid paying their fair share.

We believe America is long overdue for real tax reform that provides help to middle class families, and those aspiring to reach the middle class. This means a tax code that creates jobs, boosts wages, and gives hard-working families the tax cut that will help them get ahead.

We should be helping families with day-to-day expenses like housing, grocery bills, and child care. And we should be supporting those trying to live the American dream by helping families buy their first home, send their kids to college and care for aging parents with dignity. And, of course, we should be helping Americans save for a secure retirement.

For tax reform to be effective it must provide certainly for families and businesses alike. And the best way to provide certainty is for tax reform to be permanent, rather than temporary. History has shown that the best way to ensure that tax policy remains permanent is for it to be bipartisan.

From the beginning we have told our Republican colleagues we were ready to sit down and discuss ways to build a pro-growth tax code that was ‘middle out’ – one that rewarded hard work and helped families get ahead. That isn’t the path our Republican friends have taken, but it’s not too late. Democrats believe we can do better than a plan that provides 80 percent of the tax cuts to the top 1 percent and sticks our grandchildren with trillions in debt. That’s not a middle class plan and we’re ready to work with Republicans to build one that is.

Thank you.”

Follow Ian Hanchett on Twitter @IanHanchett

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