Collins: Taxes! Trump! Turkey!

President Donald Trump arrives at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2017, to board Marine One for a short trip to the White House. Trump returns from a five country trip through Asia traveling to Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam and the Philippines. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
President Donald Trump arrives at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2017, to board Marine One for a short trip to the White House. Trump returns from a five country trip through Asia traveling to Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam and the Philippines. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Donald Trump is back from Asia. What do you think he'll be doing next?

A) Pardoning the Thanksgiving turkey.

B) Urging Congress to pass a clean, simple, middle-class-friendly tax bill.

C) Pardoning Sean Hannity.

The answer is A, obviously. Turkey gets a reprieve on Tuesday. And rumors that the president has ordered the execution of all turkeys previously pardoned by Barack Obama are not true. It was a joke on a website. Stop telling people that!

But about the tax bill - things are getting a whole lot grislier than they are on the turkey front. Republicans desperately need to pass some kind of tax cuts, just to prove their majority is capable of doing something more exciting than renaming post offices.

People, if you were advising the Republicans on how to get a tax bill passed despite their infinitesimal majority in the Senate, would you suggest they:

A) Get Roy Moore to endorse it.

B) Add an assault on Obamacare.

C) Get rid of the part where you raise taxes on teachers who buy supplies for their classes.

OK, you're a terrible politician. Republican leaders thought carefully and decided the best strategy was to attack Obamacare. Which worked so well for them last time around.

(Perhaps you are wondering about Option C. Under the current Republican plan, teachers would still lose their princely maximum-$250 tax deduction for purchasing school supplies for their students. However, the bill is not heartless. Tax breaks for golf courses are unscathed.)

Here's the question. Why is the Senate choosing to totally complicate its tax-cut pitch, poisoning any possibility of bringing along moderate Democrats, by tossing in an all-out assault on the Affordable Care Act?

A) Rand Paul made them do it.

B) Trump told them: "Get rid of Obamacare or the turkey dies."

C) Republicans wanted more money for multinational corporations.

Honest to God, it's C. Just the other day, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told a gathering of CEOs that cutting the individual mandate out of Obamacare would save the government $330 billion over 10 years.

That $330 billion, McConnell said, would allow them "to make permanent the corporate tax rate" and "puff up some of the middle-class tax relief that we would like to puff up."

The puffing would not be permanent, by the way. One of the grandest things about the new Senate version of the tax cuts is that stuff for multinational corporations is meant to last forever, while stuff for middle-class taxpayers would fade away after a decade.

All these changes happened so swiftly and silently, almost nobody could immediately figure out what was going on. "We learned about this latest version at 10:30 last night," Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon said Wednesday. Wyden is the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee. He asked for a summary of what the new, thick, deeply complicated bill would do. "They all looked at us and said, 'Why?'"

The chances that the whole package will keep the deficit from exploding are pretty minimal. Rep. John Larson of Connecticut, one of the Democrats on the House tax-writing committee, says a Republican leader told him they would work everything out in the long run by cutting back on entitlements like Medicare. We are expecting to hear a lot more of that discussion in days to come.

Really, Trump's staff probably went through a more careful process picking out a turkey for him to pardon. And we're looking forward to that already. Will he say anything to the turkey? Wait for the turkey to pay him a compliment? It's not as if he's much of a fan of non-red meats.

Now steak is another matter. Do not ever expect Donald Trump to pardon a steer. Or lead a party.

The New York Times

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