1. It’s tax season, so I wanted to amplify reporting that might be important to you. It comes from the peerless @danfreedma. He and other reporters from regional papers sat down with Donald Trump to discuss the impact on readers of the GOP tax code overhaul.
2. Freedman reminded Trump the new law eliminates home mortgage deductions and limits deductions for SALT to $10,000. (It also raises the standard deduction and child credits, but those aren’t enough for people in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.)
3. After Freedman said the “the SALT deduction was an issue for middle-class people upstate,” Trump “expressed surprise.”

“It affects wealthy people,” Trump said.

Wrong.
4. Freedman: “After a reporter said that working middle-class homeowners looked to the SALT deduction to make ends meet, Trump said that he might be open to making changes.”
6. Before I go on, let me say Trump is not going to do anything. He punted. He said any change must originate in the House. That’s false. The president can ask Congress to debate any issue he likes.
7. The Democrats might be happy to make changes. Not a single one voted for the overhaul. Would the Republicans? Don’t count on it.
8. That’s not my point. My point is twofold. One, the president did not understand what he signed into law. He did not understand, or could not understand, that the law would, in effect, raise taxes for those residing in high-cost states, including a lot of Republicans.
9. (I have argued this factor contributed to Democrat Ned Lamont’s victory for Connecticut governor. He was the only candidate willing to fight the law.) nhregister.com/opinion/articl…
10. My other point is Trump is profoundly weak. A strong president would not have been so eager to notch “a win” that he believed whatever pap Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell spoon-fed him about consequential details of a law.
11. A strong president would have found ways of bringing in the opposing party so that if things go south, both parties can share the blame and the burden of making things right.
12. Being a weak president matters in the abstract. You never know how he will act when cornered. He might plunge the country into war to avoid problems at home. But it matters concretely, too. Presidential weakness has cold hard cash-value.
13. Let's take 5 and look at .... Baby Fiona at the Cincinnati Zoo.
14. And we're back:
Trump does not know how to negotiate. He does not bother to persuade. He cannot tolerate correction. He will not permit himself to acknowledge error. Or learn from mistakes. He won’t admit to being humiliated when everyone else can see it.
15. Important, too, is that he does not put in the work needed to lead a party. (Axios reported over the weekend that 60 percent of his workday is spent watching TV, tweeting or calling friends) The result has been a political party leading him.
16. Instead of infrastructure or a border wall, he began his tenure with a failed effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act followed by massive tax breaks for corporations and the rich.
17. Worse is that he can’t lead the United States government. Cabinet secretaries self-deal, pursue agendas, or ignore him. The Pentagon does not listen to him. (He said we were fully pulling out of Syria, but we’re not.)
18. White House aides savage him daily in the press, further eroding his credibility among lawmakers. This weakness creates conditions in which bureaucrats make decisions that can lethally wound him.
19. Which brings me back to taxes. Turns out SALT deductions aren’t the only way Americans are going to feel like their taxes have gone up instead of down. It turns out this feeling is happening in blue and red states.
20. Instead of Congress setting withholding rates on income, the US Treasury Department did. That means that for some, their withholding rate is lower than their tax cut. The result is that some tax-filers who are accustomed to getting tax returns in the spring will owe, bigly.
21. I trust @mattyglesias is correct. Treasury thought these new withholding rates were more equitable. But it’s hard to imagine this happening under a strong president with real influence over the bureaucracy who would have understood the impact of people owing more in taxes.
22. The tax law played a larger role in the midterms than is usually noted. Republicans loses in three states feeling the most pain—CA, NY and NJ—accounted for a third of all GOP loses. Moreover, two of the law’s architects, Erik Paulsen and Peter Roskam, were unseated.
23. That was mostly about SALT deductions. Withholding rates affect every state.
24. The floor of Trump’s support holds steady at 40 percent. But the president has now given supporters a reason to doubt him. And once doubt sets in, it tends to grow.
25. All the cool kids do it! Subscribe to the Editorial Board to get daily intelligence sent straight to your email inbox every business day. It’s politics in plain English for normal people! stoehr.substack.com/subscribe?
26. Or sign up for free here -------> stoehr.substack.com/p/the-cash-val…
Missing some Tweet in this thread?
You can try to force a refresh.

Like this thread? Get email updates or save it to PDF!

Subscribe to John Stoehr's Editorial Board
Profile picture

Get real-time email alerts when new unrolls are available from this author!

This content may be removed anytime!

Twitter may remove this content at anytime, convert it as a PDF, save and print for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video

1) Follow Thread Reader App on Twitter so you can easily mention us!

2) Go to a Twitter thread (series of Tweets by the same owner) and mention us with a keyword "unroll" @threadreaderapp unroll

You can practice here first or read more on our help page!

Follow Us on Twitter!

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just three indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3.00/month or $30.00/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!