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PolitiFact Florida: Jeb Bush claims Donald Trump proposed the biggest tax hike in American history

 
Jeb Bush rejects Donald Trump’s claim of conservatism.
Jeb Bush rejects Donald Trump’s claim of conservatism.
Published Sept. 8, 2015

Republican candidates continue to attack Donald Trump on his past positions, claiming he is not the conservative he says he is today.

Jeb Bush picked up the attack by taking on Trump over tax policy.

"I cut taxes every year," Bush said at an Aug. 20 rally in New Hampshire. "He's proposed the largest tax increase in mankind's history, not just our own country's history."

The next day Bush repeated the basic claim in a fundraising email: "Trump proposed enacting the largest tax increase in American history."

Seems like something worth fact-checking.

Trump's tax plan

A spokesman for Bush told us that the former Florida governor was referring to Trump's 1999 proposal to raise taxes on the rich.

Trump, who at the time was considering a run for president under the Reform Party, proposed a one-time tax on individuals and trusts with a worth of $10 million or more. Trump said the one-time tax of 14.25 percent would raise $5.7 trillion and wipe out the debt. Trump said if the rich were having trouble liquidating their assets, they could pay off their tax over 10 years.

The New York Daily News featured a photograph of Trump with the words, "SOAK THE RICH."

Experts at the time bashed Trump's plan as economically and politically unviable.

"I don't think the plan makes much economic sense," Stephen Moore, director of fiscal policy studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, told the New York Times in 1999. "The fact is that most people's wealth that has been built up over 10, 20 or 50 years is wealth that has already been taxed."

Daniel Mitchell, a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation in 1999, said of Trump's plan at the time, "The lunacy of this idea is almost indescribable." He raised concerns about the economic consequences, including that households would shift assets overseas to try to avoid confiscation.

Trump calculated that 1 percent of Americans would pay the Trump tax. He proposed that half of the savings would go toward middle-class tax cuts and the other half for Social Security.

A spokeswoman for Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, Hope Hicks, wouldn't tell us if Trump still supports that plan and said that he will release his current tax plan later this month.

But, in 2011, talk show host George Stephanopoulos asked Trump if he still supported that tax, and Trump said it was no longer viable.

"Well, at a time, it would have paid off the deficit. I mean, you wouldn't have a deficit, at that time," Trump said (though he confused debt and deficit). "Unfortunately, the world has changed. Today you can't do it. Today, and I'm very strongly against tax increases. And the reason I'm … "

"So, you're no longer for that tax?" Stephanopoulos asked.

"No, no. I'm no longer for that tax, no," Trump said.

Broken records?

Many tax experts told us that Trump's plan indeed would have been record-breaking in terms of revenue, but they said it was never going to happen and lacked major details.

"It certainly would have been the biggest ever simply because of its sheer size — it was trillions of dollars," said Roberton Williams, a fellow at the Tax Policy Center. However, "it's a totally crazy idea. … I don't think anybody was taking it seriously — it was Donald Trump being Donald Trump."

The United States' gross domestic product in 1999 was $9.7 trillion, so if Trump's tax had raised $5.7 trillion, that would have been 59 percent of GDP, said Chris Edwards of the Cato Institute.

Federal tax hikes typically are no more than 1 percent of GDP, Edwards said.

"The Bush 1990 hike and Clinton 1993 hike were less than 1 percent of GDP over five years — whereas Trump's tax would have been 59 percent one time in one year," Edwards said.

PolitiFact previously has looked into the largest tax increases as a percentage of GDP. Topping the list from 1940 to 2006 was the Revenue Act of 1942, which was about 5 percent of GDP.

Richard Phillips, an expert at the Citizens for Tax Justice research group, which aims to require the wealthy to pay their fair share, said that Trump's one-time tax proposal can't be compared to conventional tax reform, which typically refers to taxes collected annually.

"His estimate was based on a back-of-the-envelope calculation of total wealth of individuals with over $10 million in assets multiplied by the 14.25 percent rate," he said. "There are very real questions as to whether you could plausibly tax all forms of wealth and whether wealthy individuals would be able to take action to shield large swaths of their wealth from taxation."

Additionally, Trump proposed repealing the estate tax and enacting other tax cuts using the revenue that the federal government would save by no longer paying interest on the national debt. It's not clear how much those tax cuts would have cost and how much of the tax they would offset over time, Phillips said.

Bush said, "Trump proposed enacting the largest tax increase in American history."

We rate this claim True.

Edited for print. Read the full version at PolitiFact.com/florida.