Sanders adviser Stephanie Kelton praises Trump's tax hike suggestion
As President Donald Trump flirts with breaching Republican orthodoxy by letting tax cuts expire for some higher earners, he's found support from the lead economic adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders' 2016 presidential campaign.
Stephanie Kelton, an economist at Stony Brook University who drew affection and derision for arguing that policymakers should ignore the federal deficit, said in an interview with Semafor that Trump is targeting the right group for a tax bracket of 39.6% if he wants to avoid inflation.
Trump's proposals to cut taxes on Social Security, tips and overtime are 'likely to be stimulative,' she said. 'You have to think seriously about the potential for inflation.'
Kelton, who is also a fellow at the Vermont senator's Sanders Institute, said Trump's flotation of keeping current, higher marginal tax rates for new tax brackets for people making $1 million to $2.5 million 'is directionally correct.'
'It's the right idea for mitigating the inflation risk,' she said.
Kelton came to prominence as the leading avatar of Modern Monetary Theory, which dismisses the idea that governments should let worries about the deficit get in the way of spending programs. The theory peaked in popularity as governments around the world massively boosted spending during the COVID-19 pandemic with no immediate ill effects.
Now, Kelton and her allies are sometimes blamed for the dovish attitude toward inflation that played a major role in unraveling former President Joe Biden's prospects. Kelton cites a 2021 New York Times opinion article she wrote warning of inflation and arguing that taxing corporations and the super-rich wouldn't slow the spending that drives it.
The target for tax hikes, she argues, must be the merely rich, the people Trump's plan would sweep in. The top 10% of Americans account for about half of all consumer spending.
That tier of wealthy Americans who aren't in the billionaire class will temper their consumption based on their annual income, Kelton said, arguing that keeping their taxes high could help keep inflation in check.
Trump's tepid call for higher taxes on the rich follows the logic of his MAGA movement and the notion of a working-class Republican Party. The president wrote Friday that it would be 'a 'TINY' tax increase for the RICH, which I and all others would graciously accept in order to help the lower and middle income workers.' But he added that Republicans probably shouldn't do it, lest they be accused of breaking a promise not to raise taxes.
And letting tax rates rise remains anathema to a party shaped by an earlier era of Republicanism.
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, now a MAGA movement leader with his show , said in a text message that the dynamic 'shows you [how] much we changed the electorate and how little we've changed the party.'
The support from Kelton also offers a glimpse of an alternate path for Trump and his movement: a potential alliance with Democrats on matters of economic policy, where they may have more in common with one another than with the party of the president.
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has lobbied hard against any Republican shift toward supporting higher taxes: 'Given the current mood of Democrats, the bill will have to be passed with Republican votes. Poison pill tax increases will only lead Republican in-fighting – which the media and Democrats would love to watch – and the bill's potential failure.
Republicans in the House, Senate, and White House should commit themselves to passing the 'big, beautiful bill' with no new taxes,' he wrote.
Trump signaled to senators in April that he'd be open to keeping some taxes high, Semafor's Burgess Everett first reported.
Kelton in 2019, as 'the economist who believes that the government should just print more money.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Politico
28 minutes ago
- Politico
Chris Murphy calls birthright citizenship ruling ‘dangerous'
Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) on Sunday condemned the Supreme Court's decision to rule in President Donald Trump's favor over nationwide injunctions in its birthright citizenship case. Murphy on Sunday told MSNBC's Kirsten Welker that the ruling allows Trump to 'undermine' democracy. 'Taking away the power of courts to restrain the president when he's clearly acting in an unlawful manner, as he is when he says that children born in the United States are no longer citizens, you are assisting him in trying to undermine the rule of law and undermine our democracy,' Murphy said on 'Meet the Press.' Though the Supreme Court's decision did not give Trump a complete win, it did narrow nationwide injunctions that blocked his January executive order trying to end birthright citizenship for certain individuals. By a 6-3 ruling, the Supreme Court said that federal judges can't, with perhaps limited exceptions, issue injunctions that go beyond their regional authority. 'It's really dangerous because it will incentivize the president to act in a lawless manner,' Murphy added. 'Because now only the Supreme Court, who can only take a handful of cases a year, can ever stop him from violating the laws and the Constitution.' Trump has long supported ending birthright citizenship. On his first day in office this year, Trump signed an order to deny American citizenship to anyone born in the U.S. to foreigners on short-term visas or without legal status. But the 14th Amendment declares anyone 'born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof' as a citizen of the United States. The 6-3 decision down ideological lines did not weigh in on the constitutionality of Trump's order or interpret the meaning of that clause, but the White House declared Friday's ruling to be a major victory for the administration. 'I'm grateful to the Supreme Court for stepping in and solving this very, very big and complex problem, and they've made it very simple,' Trump said of the ruling. Still, Murphy said the ruling, which will take effect later in July, only creates a 'patchwork' of citizenship laws that could differ from state to state. 'Both the Constitution and the law is clear. If you're born in the United States of America, you're a U.S. citizen,' Murphy said. 'But now because there's no longer going to be a federal policy, it's going to be different in every state. A child born in the United States, born in Connecticut will be a citizen. But that same child if they were born in Oklahoma might not be. That's chaos.'
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump says he has 'a group of very wealthy people' to buy TikTok
President Donald Trump has said he has a buyer for TikTok, the video-sharing app that was banned in the US amid claims it posed a national security risk. In a Fox News interview, Trump said he had a group of "very wealthy people" willing to acquire the platform. "I'll tell you in about two weeks," he teased. A sale would need approval from the Chinese government, but Trump told Fox he thought President Xi Jinping "will probably do it". This month Trump delayed for a third time the enforcement of a law mandating TikTok's sale. The latest extension requires parent company ByteDance to reach a deal to sell the platform by 17 September. The BBC has contacted TikTok for comment. A previous deal to sell TikTok to an American buyer fell apart in April, when the White House clashed with China over Trump's tariffs. It is not clear if the current buyer Trump has lined up is the same as the one who was waiting in the wings three months ago. The US Congress passed a law forcing TikTok's sale in April last year, with lawmakers citing fears that the app or its parent company could hand over US user data to the Chinese government, which TikTok denied. Trump had criticised the app during his first term, but came to see it as a factor in his 2024 election win and now supports its continued use in the US. The law was supposed to take effect on 19 January, but Trump has repeatedly delayed its enforcement through executive actions, moves that have drawn criticism for overruling congressional lawmakers. TikTok challenged the constitutionality of the law, but lost its appeal to the US Supreme Court. Trump confirms further delay to TikTok ban or sale deadline
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump Says Working on Temporary Pass for Migrant Farm, Hotel Workers
President Trump said the administration is working on a "temporary pass" for migrant workers in certain industries, including farms and hotels. The comments come as the Trump administration continues its nationwide immigration sweep aimed at rounding up people who are in the U.S. without authorization.