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The GOP debate showed signs of division over conservatism

Last night's GOP debate showed some division within the Republican ranks. This article highlights the discrepancies.

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Jeffrey Phelps/AP/File
Republican presidential candidates John Kasich, Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, Donald Trump, Ben Carson, Ted Cruz, Carly Fiorina and Rand Paul appear during the Republican presidential debate at the Milwaukee Theatre, Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015, in Milwaukee. Some division was visible.

Last night鈥檚 GOP presidential debates (聽of the main event) highlighted some important聽聽among the candidates. One thought refundable credits are conservative economic policy while another did not.聽 Nearly all would preserve deductions for mortgage interest and charitable gifts but one would ditch them. One worried about what his rivals鈥 enormous tax cuts would mean for the budget deficit while most others were unwilling to confront the fiscal consequences of their ideas.

Here were some of the highlights:

Mortgage interest and charitable giving. They say to be a successful surgeon you need to be utterly confident and willing to take risks. Well, Ben Carson did what no other GOP candidate would: Promise to ditch those two popular and sacrosanct deductions. 聽If you are an anti-government conservative, you might be able to make a case for keeping the charitable deduction. After all, in your worldview, non-profits would do much of what government does today. But how do you justify keeping the mortgage deduction, especially when you鈥檇 dump nearly all others? Oh yeah, the real estate lobby. But, as Carson said, people owned houses and gave to charity before the income tax, and they still would.

Refundable credits:聽Senators Marco Rubio and Rand Paul got into it over Rubio鈥檚 plan to expand the Child Tax Credit (CTC). Paul asked how聽Rubio could claim to be a conservative after proposing 鈥渁 trillion dollars in transfer payments鈥 to low income families. Rubio has made his concern for families with children聽a centerpiece of his campaign rhetoric and insisted last night that the credits were offsetting 鈥渙ther taxes鈥 these families pay. Paul might also ask about the credentials of Milton Friedman, the conservative icon who invented the US version of the聽, a precursor to refundable credits such as the CTC and the Earned Income Tax Credit.

Should low-income households pay income taxes at all?聽The candidates expressed very different views about this related issue. In last night鈥檚 undercard debate, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal defended his 2 percent minimum tax on all households regardless of income. Everyone, he said, should have some skin in the game no matter how little they make (though Jindal would retain some form of EITC).聽 All other candidates, including Paul, include a large standard deduction or personal exemption to protect聽low income families from the income tax. Even Carson, who until last night had been touting a 鈥渇lat鈥 10 or 15 percent rate, said his plan would include some low income exemption.

In many cases, this design would increase the number of low-income households who pay no income tax, a reversal of Mitt Romney鈥檚 rhetoric of three years ago. To further complicate matters, even Paul would retain the child and earned income credits (though the rest of his tax proposal is quite different from Rubio鈥檚).

Tax cuts and deficits: Ohio Governor John Kasich said 鈥渨e鈥檝e got to be responsible about what we propose on the tax side.鈥澛 Kasich, Paul, and Cruz claimed to have laid out specific spending cuts to offset the cost of their tax reductions, though it鈥檚 hard to know if they add up. Kasich himself, for instance, says he鈥檇 get much of his saving from slowing the growth of health care, but doesn鈥檛 quite explain how. Most of the other candidates have made little or no effort to specify the spending cuts or revenue raisers they鈥檇 need to avoid big increases in the national debt.聽 Rather, they fall back on gauzy rhetoric about closing tax 鈥榣oopholes,鈥 cutting unnamed 鈥渆ntitlements,鈥 and promises of huge increases in economic growth.

Some of last night鈥檚 arguments were more rhetorical than real. After all, despite their squabbles over refundable credits, nearly every candidate has at least one. But they did begin to help voters sort out聽their choices.

This article first appeared at

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