Paul Ryan responded to President Obama’s plan
to cut taxes for the middle class by lying about the president’s plan
and calling for a tax increase on the middle class.
Obama’s tax plan closes loopholes that the
super-rich and corporations use to avoid paying their share of taxes
while giving millions of middle-class families a tax cut. In a
statement, Paul Ryan’s office responded by calling for tax cuts on the rich and
tax increases for the middle class. Ryan spokesperson Brendan Buck
said, “This is not a serious proposal. We lift families up and grow the
economy with a simpler, flatter tax code, not big tax increases to pay
for more Washington spending.”
What Ryan means by a flatter tax code can be found
in each of his four budget. Paul Ryan’s flatter tax means cutting taxes
for those at the top while eliminating deductions and tax breaks for
everyone else. The Center For Budget and Policy Priorities broke down
Ryan’s 2013 budget and found that in order to cut taxes on the wealthy, Ryan’s plan would raise taxes on the middle class,
“As explained below, even with the same dramatic scaling back of tax
expenditures for filers with incomes above $200,000 that TPC examined in
its Romney analysis — including entirely wiping out their deductions
for mortgage interest and charitable giving — families with children
that have incomes below $200,000 would have to face tax increases
averaging more than $3,000 a year, if policymakers were to avoid
increasing the deficit while reaching Chairman Ryan’s 25-percent
top-tax-rate goal.”
Ryan’s (r-WI) entire philosophy is centered
around redistributing wealth to the rich. Ryan is the biggest proponent
of the trickle down fairy tale. Each of Ryan’s budgets has been
built around the fantasy that the economy will grow if the super rich
don’t pay any taxes. The philosophy that repugicans are trying to
defend does not work.
“Almost all of the stimulative effect of tax cuts,” Zidar found, “results from tax cuts for the bottom 90%. A one percent of GDP tax cut for the bottom 90% results in 2.7 percentage points of GDP growth over a two-year period. The corresponding estimate for the top 10% is 0.13 percentage points and is insignificant statistically.”
Paul Ryan responded to the president’s proposal to
do something that has been proven to work by proposing a course of
action that has never worked.
The repugicans are married to a failed ideology that
keeps the checks coming in from their rich backers, but will never
create economic prosperity.
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