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McCain Offers Tax Policies He Once Opposed
Reversal Includes New
Support for Bush Cuts
Excerpts from and
Article in the Washington Post by Jonathan Weisman
Staff Writer, Friday, April 25, 2008; Page A01 -
Staff writer Juliet Eilperin contributed to this report.
Senator John McCain
has again changed his position on Taxes, (Evolved as the Republican Spin Machine describes
it. ) Following is an excerpt from an article in the Washington Post by Johnathan Wiseman:
On May 26,
2001, after then-Sen. Lincoln D. Chafee (R.I.) cast his vote against President Bush's $1.35 trillion tax cut, he trudged back to his office,
convinced, he recalled, that he had been the lone Republican to oppose the largest tax cut
in two decades.
But Chafee's staff told him that one other Republican,
who had largely avoided the grueling efforts at compromise, had joined him in dissent.
That senator, John McCain, was marching to his own beat, Chafee said, impervious to pressure
from either side.
Now that he is the presumptive Republican presidential
nominee, however, McCain is marching straight down the party line. The economic package he
has laid out embraces many of the tax policies he once decried: extending Bush's tax cuts
he voted against, offering investment tax breaks he once believed would have little
economic benefit and granting the long-held wishes of tax lobbyists he has often mocked.
McCain's concerns -- about budget deficits, unanticipated
defense costs, an Iraq war that would be longer and more costly than advertised -- have
proved eerily prescient, usually a plus for politicians who are quick to say they were
right when others were wrong. Yet McCain appears determined to leave such predictions
behind.
"He's looking forward, not back," said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, McCain's senior policy adviser.
To supporters, McCain has simply seen the light and now
understands the power that business tax relief has to spur economic growth and innovation.
Said J.D. Foster, a former Bush White House and Treasury tax policy expert, now at the Heritage Foundation: "It's logical that he wouldn't be repeating the
arguments he made then. We all learn from experience."
To critics, it is political pandering. "It's just
part of the new John McCain that's taking on the conventional wisdom that in tight races,
you have to energize the base and win by 50.000001 percent," Chafee said. "I was
frankly surprised that he's kept it up after securing the nomination. I thought he'd move
to the center, and I haven't seen it."
Holtz-Eakin urged skeptics to "wind the clock way
back," saying McCain has supported lower taxes and a smaller federal government
throughout his political career.
But McCain's conflicts with fellow Republicans over taxes
date back well before his differences with Bush. In December 1994, after his party swept
to control of Congress on tax-cut promises, he challenged Ronald
Reagan's legacy when he warned, "I think we would be making a terrible mistake to
go back to the '80s, where we cut all of those taxes and all of a sudden now we've got a
debt that we've got to pay on an annual basis that is bigger than the amount that we spend
on defense."
In 1998, Republican leaders and their tobacco industry
allies lambasted McCain's $516 billion tobacco regulation bill as the "McCain
tax," painting it as big-government overreach and a $1.10 tax increase on every pack
of cigarettes.
"This bill is not about taxes," he pleaded,
just before the measure fell to a Republican filibuster. "It's about whether we're
going to allow the death march of 418,000 Americans a year who die early from
tobacco-related disease and do nothing."
In 2001, just days before Bush's first tax cut passed,
McCain lamented on ABC's "This Week" that, "I'd like to see much more of
this tax cut shared by working Americans. . . . I think it still devotes too much of it to
the wealthiest Americans."
Almost exactly two years later, Bush was back for more:
$350 billion in tax cuts, which accelerated the first round and added deep cuts to the tax
rates on dividends and capital gains.
"Most of the economists view this as primarily
benefiting wealthier Americans," McCain said on CNBC
at the time. "There's a theory, I think, that's prevalent -- it was true in the 2001
tax cuts -- that if you give it to the wealthy people, then they will then, you know,
create jobs, et cetera. The interesting thing to me is that most economists will tell you
that it's the middle-income Americans that have been keeping the economy afloat."
Indeed, many of his warnings from those years have come
to pass. Numerous expiration dates on those tax cuts, designed to hold down the cost to
the Treasury, proved to be just the "gimmicks" he said they were, as Congress
extended them repeatedly. The budget deficits he warned about in 2001 reemerged in
dramatic fashion, as did defense spending increases not accounted for when Bush said the
tax cuts were affordable. And the war in Iraq proved to be far longer and more expensive
than lawmakers had expected when they approved the 2003 cuts.
"We have enormous defense expenditures. We don't
know the cost of the war. We don't know the cost of reconstruction. We know it's in the
tens of billions, at least, if not more," McCain said before the 2003 cuts were
approved. "Obviously, we're going to be in Iraq a lot longer than many had
anticipated."
Yet in Pittsburgh last week, in the face of a projected
budget deficit of $400 billion and a sixth year of war, McCain proposed extending Bush's
tax cuts, including the dividends and capital gains tax cuts, lowering the corporate
income tax, allowing businesses to write off the cost of new equipment and technology,
banning Internet and new cellphone taxes, and permanently extending the business tax
credit for research and development.
By McCain's accounting, his tax proposals would cost the
Treasury $200 billion a year.
"Philosophically, John McCain believes Americans pay
too much in taxes, not too little," said Steve Schmidt, one of McCain's senior
strategists. "The economy is in distress. Senator McCain wants to grow the
economy."
Conservative tax policy analysts noted that some things
McCain predicted in his earlier days did not happen. In 2003, he doubted that a capital
gains and dividends tax cut would have any economic effect, and said that whatever gains
were to be had would be swamped by rising deficits and interest rates. Foster said,
however, that the economy took off with the passage of the 2003 tax cut, and although
budget deficits have remained, interest rates have stayed low.
Holtz-Eakin said McCain did campaign for president in
2000 on a tax cut plan, albeit one significantly smaller than Bush's. But it was always
meant as a first step toward a simple flat-tax system, Holtz-Eakin said. His latest tax
proposal is merely the next step in that process, building on the past eight years of tax
changes.
No doubt, conservatives say, McCain is now on the right
political side of the tax issue.
"He's put himself in a position where a conversation
about the economy is a conversation about Democratic tax increases and Republican lower
taxes, and that's where any Republican wants to be," said Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, who has clashed
fiercely with McCain in the past.
But a change of position can always be used by the
opposition, and Democrats have already begun.
"He's promising . . . tax cuts that he once voted
against because he said they offended his conscience," Sen. Barack
Obama (Ill.) said Tuesday night. "Well, they may have stopped offending John
McCain's conscience somewhere along the road to the White House, but George Bush's
economic policies still offend ours."
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