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What Mitt Romney didn't learn from Ronald Reagan about taxes

There are so many things the former Massachusetts governor could learn from the former California governor鈥檚 presidential campaigns. But I have in mind only one lesson not learned by Mitt Romney 鈥 how Reagan ran on tax reform in 1984.

By Howard Gleckman, Guest blogger

If only Mitt Romney had paid attention to Ronald Reagan.

There are so many things the former Massachusetts governor could learn from the former California governor鈥檚 presidential campaigns. But I have in mind only one lesson not learned鈥攈ow Reagan ran on tax reform in 1984.

Reagan only cautiously embraced the idea of rewriting the tax code in 鈥84 (see Alan Murray and Jeff Birnbaum鈥檚 fine retelling of the history of the 1986 Tax Reform Act鈥Showdown at Gucci Gulch). But he cleverly used the tantalizing prospect of reform without ever overpromising.

This is what Reagan had to say in his January, 1984 State of the Union Address:

Note to Gov. Romney: Reagan cast reform in gauzy generalities of fairness, simplicity, and economic growth. He said he might broaden the tax base, but didn鈥檛 say how. He said he might cut tax rates, but didn鈥檛 say by how much. And he said he wanted the Treasury Secretary to get him a specific plan in December, not accidently a month after the 1984 election.

Romney, by contrast, not only promised to cut tax rates, he even said by exactly how much鈥20 percent across the board. Reagan鈥檚 popular goals of fairness and simplicity play distinct second fiddle to Romney鈥檚 focus on tax cuts for job creators. And instead of saying he鈥檒l craft a plan of his own, Romney鈥檚 campaign says the details should be left to Congress. Given the level聽of public confidence in the Hill, he might as well have promised to turn it over to Snooki.

Romney鈥檚 biggest problem, though, is that he is so transparently trying to have it both ways. On one hand, explicit promises of tax rate cuts for all. On the other, stonewalling all questions about which popular subsidies he鈥檇 ditch.

This tactic is hardly unique in political campaigns. After all, why would any politician disclose that part of his agenda聽sure to make聽voters mad? Yet, it is fundamentally misleading. And it is causing Romney no end of grief.

Reagan, recall, was ambiguous about both sides of the bargain. This allowed him to remain purposefully vague about the gory details of tax reform throughout the 鈥84 campaign. And he was almost never challenged on it. Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale borrowed a line from a popular fast-food chain ad to ask 鈥渨here鈥檚 the beef鈥 in an effort to challenge his opponent鈥檚 fuzzy campaign promises. But Mondale was talking about primary opponent Gary Hart, not Reagan.

Romney isn鈥檛 so lucky. Sure, promising specific rate cuts was popular, especially during the聽GOP primaries. But Romney鈥檚 very act of explicitly laying out those rate cuts is driving deeply-skeptical general election voters to demand to know about the other half of the transaction.

The masterful Reagan gave himself both a powerful campaign issue and enough running room to propose, and eventually convince Congress to pass, the most ambitious tax reform of our time.

Now, on an issue that Republicans usually own, Romney is on the defensive. If before Nov. 6 he identifies which tax preferences he鈥檇 cut, he will unleash a firestorm of criticism from both Democrats and those special interests that benefit from these subsides. This will damage both his election chances and likelihood of reform no matter who wins in November. If Romney keeps silent, he鈥檒l be unable to claim any kind of mandate for reform.

Somewhere, Ronald Reagan is looking on in sadness.