Donald Trump Wants to Raise Your Taxes Virtually any future deficit-reduction plan — except for a repeal of the Trump tax plan — would hurt most families more than his plan helps them. Meanwhile, Trump and other Republican leaders keep repeating “middle class,” “middle class,” “middle class.” Yet there is also a major difference between the current plan and George W. Bush’s tax cut or Ronald Reagan’s. Trump’s plan would not actually cut taxes for many middle-class families. And the deduction for state and local taxes — also a target for cuts — now benefits 30 percent of households nationwide. Having lavished so much money on the wealthy, the tax package — or at least the vague framework that the administration has released — doesn’t have much remaining to spend on middle class and poor families. Their plan would deliver an average tax cut of $700,000 to the nation’s 175,000 richest families. Trump and his allies are feverishly trying to claim their plan really would benefit the middle class. The old formula for passing a big tax cut for the rich was simple: Package it with a modest tax cut for the middle class — and talk endlessly about the middle-class part. Share of each income group whose taxes would increase under the Trump plan, both immediately and after a decade. First, Trump’s plan takes a skimpy approach to inflation adjustments, which will push many families into higher tax brackets over time.
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