TPM: Romney’s Tight Grip On Information Puts Campaign On Defensive Over Taxes
The report, by researchers at the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, looked at Romneys call for a 20% income tax cut for everyone, that he says he would finance by ending existing (and as-yet-unnamed) tax deductions. They assumed for their analysis that Romney would try to eliminate tax breaks favoring the rich as much as possible to pay for his plan, before turning to popular middle-class deductions on health care and mortgage payments to make up the remaining gap. But even allowing for that highly generous baseline, the average American family making less than $200,000 would still have to pay $2,000 more of their income in taxes while the richest .1% would see an average net tax cut close to $250,000.
The study puts Romney in a tricky spot. His campaign has not disputed the substance of its findings. Doing so would require him to provide much more information explaining how he intends to pay for his 20% tax cut, information that could invite Democratic attacks if, as expected, his offsets included eliminating popular tax breaks for the middle class or powerful interest groups.
Certainly this argues for more detail from Team Romney, conservative economics blogger James Pethokoukis wrote, adding that the the study while too pessimistic about revenues for his taste was mostly fair.
Instead of releasing more detail, however, Romney is trying to shoot the messenger. His campaign put out a press release denouncing the Tax Policy Center as a liberal group that cant be trusted. But thats not likely to fly considering Romneys own aides have referred to the group repeatedly as an independent and impartial referee. One November press release from the Romney camp highlighting a study of then-opponent Rick Perrys tax proposal called the Tax Policy Center an objective, third-party analysis. Other Romney press releases cited Tax Policy Center analyses of tax plans from Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum as well.
More:
http://2012.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/08/romney-tax-plan-brookings-95-percent.php