"I am willing to pay more, and you know what, the wealthy are
willing to pay more," Trump told ABC's "This Week."
After effectively sealing the Republican nomination for the Nov. 8
presidential election last week, Trump has used speeches and
interviews to offer more details on his policy positions.
The billionaire real estate tycoon has said he would like to see an
increase in the minimum wage, although he told NBC's "Meet the
Press" on Sunday he would prefer to see states take the lead on that
front instead of the federal government.
"I don't know how people make it on $7.25 an hour," Trump said of
the current federal minimum wage. "I would like to see an increase
of some magnitude. But I'd rather leave it to the states. Let the
states decide."
Trump's call for higher taxes on the wealthy is a break with
Republican presidential nominees who have staunchly opposed tax
hikes for almost three decades. Tax hikes have been anathema to many
in the party since former President George H.W. Bush infuriated
fellow Republicans by abandoning a pledge not to raise taxes and
agreeing to an increase in a 1990 budget deal.
Democrats, including presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton, have
pressed for increased taxes on the wealthiest Americans for years.
Trump released a tax proposal last September that included broad tax
breaks for businesses and households. He proposed reducing the
highest income tax rate to 25 percent from the current 39.6 percent
rate.
Pressed on the contradiction between his latest comments on taxes
and the September tax plan, Trump said he viewed his original
proposal as "a concept" and that he expected it would be changed
following negotiations with Congress.
"By the time it gets negotiated, it's going to be a different plan,"
Trump told ABC. He emphasized in separate interviews with ABC and
NBC that his priorities were lowering taxes on the middle class and
businesses.
"The middle class has to be protected," Trump told NBC. The rich are
"probably going to end up paying more," he said.
The Clinton campaign said Trump was trying to pander to voters
beyond those who supported him in the Republican nominating contests
and that he had no intention of raising the taxes of wealthy people.
"Don't believe Donald Trump's weak attempts at a general election
'makeover' for even a second," Christina Reynolds, a Clinton
campaign spokeswoman, said in a statement. "Trump's economic plans
take direct aim at working Americans - his proposal to cut trillions
in taxes for the top one percent would almost certainly come at the
expense of working- and middle-class families."
When asked on NBC whether he would release his own tax returns
before the election, Trump said once again that it depended on the
completion of an audit.
"Sure. If the auditors finish. I'll do it as fast as the auditors
finish," he said.
[to top of second column] |
DEEP DIVIDE
Republicans remain deeply divided over Trump's candidacy, although
he has pledged to try to unite the party ahead of its convention in
July. Prominent party leaders such as Paul Ryan, the top elected
U.S. Republican, have distanced themselves from Trump over his
proposal to temporarily ban Muslims from entering the United States.
Ryan, who has been a leading voice for the Republican Party on
budget issues for years and is the House of Representatives speaker,
has proposed a series of budgets that would cut taxes across the
board.
Trump has also called for new tariffs on Chinese and Mexican imports
to the United States, a position at odds with views on trade held by
Ryan and many other pro-business Republicans.
Ryan, who will preside over the July 18-21 convention in Cleveland
where the party will formally nominate its presidential candidate,
said last week he hoped to eventually support Trump. But he added:
"I'm just not there right now."
Republican U.S. Senator Jeff Flake of Arizona also is undecided
about Trump. Flake said he wanted to see Trump revise some of his
positions, including the proposed ban on Muslims entering the United
States.
"He's got to soften his position there," Flake said.
Underscoring the party's divisions, Sarah Palin, the 2008 Republican
vice presidential candidate and a Trump supporter, criticized Ryan
for failing to endorse Trump. The conservative populist firebrand
said she would work to defeat Ryan in his Aug. 9 primary race
against a conservative businessman.
Clinton said she hoped to take advantage of Republican reticence
over Trump to draw the support of party defectors.
"I am asking people to come join this campaign," the former
secretary of state told CBS. "And I've had a lot of outreach from
Republicans in the last days who say that they are interested in
talking about that."
(Additional reporting by Dustin Volz in Washington and Jonathan
Allen in New York; Editing by Paul Simao and Peter Cooney)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |