In dueling speeches, Harris is to make her capitalist pitch while Trump
pushes deeper into populism
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[September 25, 2024]
By JOSH BOAK
WASHINGTON (AP) — Derided by Donald Trump as a “communist,” Kamala
Harris is playing up her street cred as a capitalist.
Attacked by Harris as a rich kid who got $400 million from his father on
a “silver platter,” Trump is leaning into his raw populism.
The two presidential candidates are set to deliver dueling speeches on
Wednesday that reflect how they're honing their economic messages for
voters in battleground states. Both are trying to counter criticism of
them while laying out their best case for a public that still worries
about the economy’s health.
Vice President Harris is set to speak at the Economic Club of
Pittsburgh, where she plans to stress a “pragmatic” philosophy while
outlining new policies to boost domestic manufacturing, according to a
senior campaign official who sought anonymity to describe the upcoming
address. The Democratic nominee's remarks come after she told a swanky
audience of donors in New York City on Sunday that she would cut any
“red tape” holding back growth.
Former President Trump is scheduled to deliver a speech in Mint Hill,
North Carolina, about how he will protect workers. The Republican
nominee made his reputation as a businessman, but he's recently
expressed a willingness to crack down on businesses and has proposed to
cap interest rates on credit cards and slap a whopping 200% tariff on
tractor-maker John Deere if it moves any jobs to Mexico.
The candidates are each emphasizing the economy at a time when polls
show that it is one of the most important issues for voters as they
consider who to support. A recent AP-NORC poll found that neither
candidate has a decisive edge with the public on the issue.
Both are eager to embrace an image as tax cutters and are accusing the
other of backing massive tax hikes on the middle class. It's a
meaningful shift in messaging as inflation concerns have ebbed somewhat
with the Federal Reserve cutting its benchmark interest rates last week.
Billionaire Mark Cuban said business leaders like him are backing Harris
because she has taken considered stances that companies can understand
even when they have a different perspective.
"I want a president that for business goes into details and has a policy
team that understands all the ramifications of what’s been proposed,”
Cuban said on a Tuesday call with reporters set up by the Harris
campaign.
Trump initially stressed the importance of increasing oil production and
cutting corporate tax rates and preserving tax breaks for the wealthy to
spur economic growth. But in recent days, he's been offering a host of
other ideas. In addition to wanting no taxes on tips, Social Security or
overtime pay, he wants to limit the interest rate on credit cards to 10%
and set up low-tax zones on federal lands to lure employers. Trump also
wants to ditch the cap on the deduction of state and local taxes that he
put into the tax code in 2017 while president.
“Americans will no longer worry about losing their jobs to foreign
nations, instead foreign nations will be worried about losing their jobs
to America,” Trump campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said in a
statement.
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Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks
about the tax code and manufacturing at the Johnny Mercer Theatre
Civic Center, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024, in Savannah, Ga. (AP
Photo/Evan Vucci)
Both candidates see an opportunity to trash the other's tax ideas.
Trump recently dubbed Harris the “tax queen." She wants to raise the
corporate tax rate to 28% from 21% as well as tax the unrealized
capital gains of people worth more than $100 million. She would use
the revenue from that and other policies to sustain tax cuts for the
middle class that are set to expire after 2025 as well as offer new
tax breaks to parents and entrepreneurs. Many of her policies build
on ideas initially proposed by President Joe Biden.
Trump claims her tax hikes would ultimately trickle down to the
middle class.
“She’s coming for your money," he told an audience on Monday. "She’s
coming for your pensions, and she’s coming for your savings.”
Harris has shown that two can play that game. She labeled his call
for tariffs a “national sales tax,” as it could increase the cost of
coffee, clothes, electronics, autos and almost anything that gets
imported or depends on imported parts. Her campaign likes to cite an
analysis that originated with Brendan Duke of the Center for
American Progress that estimated a 20% universal tariff would cost a
typical family almost $4,000 a year. For taxpayers in the
middle-income range, that sum would effectively increase their total
federal taxes by 50%, according to calculations based on Treasury
Department data.
Speaking in Georgia on Tuesday, Trump singled out the word “tariff”
for praise, calling it “one of the most beautiful words I’ve ever
heard.” He said it would raise hundreds of billions in tax revenues
and not cause inflation.
Most economic analyses say broad tariffs would worsen inflation. The
investment bank Goldman Sachs suggested that the tariffs,
accompanied by a crackdown on immigrants in the United States, would
hurt growth.
Harris has made efforts to elevate the middle class her top
priority, often talking about her own background in the middle class
to suggest that her ideas emerged out of a personal journey.
But at a New York City event on Sunday, she also made a pitch aimed
at corporations that want less drama when dealing with government.
“We will create a stable business environment with consistent and
transparent rules of the road," Harris said. "We will invest in
semiconductors, clean energy, and other industries of the future.
And we will cut needless bureaucracy and unnecessary red tape, all
of which will create jobs, drive broad-based economic growth, and
cement America’s leadership throughout the world.”
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