Trump to Unveil Tax Plan Monday

Trump to Unveil Tax Plan Monday

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump is set to roll out a tax plan Monday he says will reduce rates for lower and middle-income families as well as corporations, while increasing rates for some, like hedge fund managers who he says don't pay enough.

It's a plan the billionaire businessman has been touting for weeks as he's come under increased scrutiny for failing to outline specific policy platforms as he's risen to the top of GOP polls.

"It's a substantial reduction for the middle-income people," Trump said of the plan in an interview on CBS's "60 Minutes" that aired Sunday evening. "It will be a corporate-also reduction. I think it'll be a great incentive for corporations."

The plan is expected to share many aspects in common with those put forward by other Republican presidential hopefuls, including former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who have called for dramatically simplifying the tax code. But Trump is also expected to put forward several ideas contrary to typical GOP talking points.

He said Sunday the plan would include eliminating income taxes altogether for people at the lower end of the income spectrum.

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"There will be a large segment of our country that will have a zero rate," he said in the interview.

At the same time, Trump is expected to take aim at groups like hedge fund managers he has long complained don't pay enough. He would propose to change this, for instance, by eliminating the so-called "carried interest loophole" that allows managers of hedge funds and private equity firms to pay a lower tax rate than most individuals.

"I think it's going to be a plan that's going to make people happy, other than maybe the hedge fund guys who make hundreds of millions of dollars and pay very little tax," Trump said during a recent town hall event in Columbia, South Carolina, adding: "I think they're all going to be my enemies."

He said Sunday the plan would be revenue neutral, or bring in more money, and pushed back against the idea that he was breaking with the Republican Party by calling for higher rates for some wealthy earners.

"I'm a pretty good Republican. But I will tell you this, I do have some differences," he said. "I don't want to have certain people on Wall Street getting away with paying no tax."

The real estate mogul has proposed a variety of tax overhauls over the years, including some that have raised eyebrows from groups like the tax-cutting advocacy group Club for Growth.

In his 2001 book "The America We Deserve," Trump proposed a one-time, 14.25 percent tax on individuals and trusts with a net worth over $10 million — a plan he claimed would bring in $5.7 trillion in new revenue, which he said would be enough to pay off the entire national debt. (The actual debt currently stands at more than $18 trillion.)

"Some will say that my plan is unfair to the extremely wealthy," he wrote then. "I say it is only reasonable to shift the burden to those most able to pay."

By 2011, Trump had abandoned the tax-the-rich plan, and in his book "Time to Get Tough," he proposed lowering the U.S. corporate tax rate to zero, and unveiled a "1-5-10-15" income tax plan.

Under his proposal, those who made up to $30,000 a year would pay 1 percent; those who made from $30,000 to $100,000 a year would pay 5 percent; those who made from $100,000 to $1 million would pay 10 percent; income of $1 million or more would have been taxed at 15 percent.

Trump also proposed lowering rates on capital gains and dividends, slapping a 20 percent tax on companies that outsourced jobs and a 20 percent tax on foreign countries shipping goods in the U.S.

Two pages later, as Trump summarized his proposals, he'd changed his proposed tax to 15 percent for outsourcing jobs.

(KA)

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