Tax cuts offer Republicans a Trump-free
campaign option
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[February 27, 2018]
By Kim Palmer
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (Reuters) - As Republican
U.S. Senator Rob Portman spoke to small-business owners over the weekend
in his home state of Ohio, he hammered on a major election-year theme
for Republicans - that tax cuts are helping the little guy.
What did not come up in his talk in Zanesville was the more complicated
topic of Republican President Donald Trump, whose victory in Ohio in
2016 helped propel him to the White House.
The enactment last year of a huge tax-cut package could offer
Republicans in battleground states the chance to campaign in November's
congressional elections without the burden of Trump's relatively high
unfavorability ratings.
The president claimed credit for the tax overhaul he signed into law in
December, the biggest in 30 years. But the plan was developed and
approved by Republican lawmakers with minimal White House involvement.
It was the Republican-controlled Congress' only major accomplishment of
2017.
So some Republicans may feel free to leave Trump out of their tax-cut
message. Portman, a centrist who is not up for re-election in November,
did just that on Friday and Saturday.
"We have seen over 350 companies make positive announcements ... they
all have a positive story to tell about how they are taking the tax
savings and plowing it back into their business," Portman said at GKM
Auto Parts on Friday.
Portman said a month before the 2016 election that he could not support
Trump and said afterward he did not vote for him.
Before a small group of business people, GKM owner Kelly Moore praised
Portman for helping craft the tax bill that she said let her reinstate
healthcare coverage for her employees.
On his "Results for the Middle Class Tax Reform Tour," Portman has
hosted several other tax-focused events, including ones on Saturday in
Cleveland and Mentor. Reports on his official website from the two
events made no mention of Trump.
DEMOCRATIC CHALLENGE
Portman is seeking to promote the tax cuts as a benefit for working
Americans, but that view is strongly challenged by Democrats, who say
the tax changes mainly benefit corporations and the rich.
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U.S. Senator Rob Portman asks small business owners about how the
Tax Cuts & Jobs Act effects their business during his tour of Ohio
in Zanesville, Ohio, U.S., February 23, 2018. Picture takes on
February 23, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Palmer
The issue may not be a sure-fire winner with voters. A Feb. 13-22
Reuters/Ipsos poll found a range of views about the tax legislation,
with only 3 percent of respondents saying they had received an
actual benefit, like a raise or bonus.
Ohio's other U.S. senator, Democrat Sherrod Brown, is seeking
re-election this November, with the state likely to be a major
electoral battleground as the two parties fight for control of
Congress. Portman and Trump are both backing Representative Jim
Renacci in the Republican primary race to choose a challenger to
Brown.
Ohio Democrats accused Portman of skirting questions about the tax
bill by staging "PR events with captive audiences."
"Portman conveniently forgets to mention that companies Trump touted
for giving bonuses have been simultaneously laying off workers,”
said Ohio Democratic Party Chairman David Pepper.
But some Republican strategists said talks like the one Portman gave
in Zanesville were helping the party shrink the Democrats' advantage
in a generic poll as to which party is favored by voters in
congressional elections.
The tax cuts are much friendlier territory for Republicans than
Trump’s tweets, said John Feehery, a lobbyist and former senior
Republican aide in the House of Representatives.
“If we are talking about President Trump and his character, it's
probably not a winner for Republicans," Feehery said.
(Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell in Washington and Chris Kahn
in New York; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Peter Cooney)
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