Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders
is proposing tax increases that are even bigger than the ones President
Joe Biden is considering.
Sanders, in an interview with NPR, said that he is planning to
introduce legislation Thursday that would raise the corporate tax rate
to 35%, higher than the 28% that Biden has proposed. The corporate rate
is currently 21%, which was cut from 35% in President Donald Trump’s
2017 tax overhaul.
The push for even steeper tax increases demonstrates that Democrats
are divided on the scope of the levy hikes they should pursue as they
look for ways to finance infrastructure, climate change programs, and
other priorities. Democrats largely agree that businesses and wealthy
households should pay higher taxes, but they have yet to debate the
specifics of those increases.
Yet Sanders’ proposal is certain to face fierce opposition from
Republicans, who make up half of the Senate, and misgivings from some
moderate Democrats.
Sanders, a Vermont independent who caucuses with Democrats, also told
NPR he would introduce a second bill that will create a surtax on the
estates of the richest Americans. As Budget Committee chairman, his
panel doesn’t have direct jurisdiction over the tax code, but Sanders
said he sees his committee taking a broad approach to economic issues.
“What we want to do is use the committee to focus on the crises
facing the working class of this country, the middle class of this
country, talk about issues like income and wealth inequality, talk about
the mass amounts of tax avoidance and tax breaks that the very
wealthiest people in this country, talk about student debt, talk about
how much it will cost us if we do not address the existential threat of
climate change,” Sanders said in the NPR interview. “In other words,
look at the major issues facing our country and focus a spotlight on
them.”
The Budget Committee is scheduled to hold a hearing Thursday that
will include testimony from Abigail E. Disney, an heiress to the Walt
Disney Co. fortune, who also advocates for higher taxes on the wealthy,
and Gabriel Zucman, the University of California at Berkeley economist
who helped develop a tax plan for Senator Elizabeth Warren when she ran
for president.
No comments:
Post a Comment