Business leaders may be uncomfortable with the autocratic lurch of the Republican party, but these traditional allies seem to be reuniting in response to a common threat: President Biden and his plan to raise taxes.
After the Jan. 6 takeover of the U.S. Capitol, some businesses said they would halt donations to Republicans who egged on rioters or tried to block Biden from taking office. Republican efforts to restrict voting in Georgia, Texas, Florida, Michigan and other states have now prompted dozens of CEOs to brainstorm ways they can countermand GOP bills and protect voting rights.
But profits trump conscience, and the business lobby is now aligning with Republicans who oppose Biden’s plan to raise the corporate tax rate—and hope it will help them flip control of Congress back to Republicans in the 2022 midterm elections. Top business groups, including the Business Roundtable, the US Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers, are running ads against the Biden plan in the districts of vulnerable Democrats, with the implicit message that supporting the Biden tax hikes could generate well-funded political opposition in 2022 and possibly cost Democrats control of the House or Senate, or both.
The campaign “is not aimed at changing the minds of voters, who right now support tax increases on the wealthy and corporations,” Beacon Policy Advisors explained in an April 13 analysis. “It’s to target moderate Democrats directly to say this will be a politically costly vote for them.”
Biden wants to raise the business tax rate from 21% to 28% to help pay for infrastructure and social-welfare spending in his American Jobs Plan, which Congress is drafting now. The top business rate was 35% until Republicans lowered it to 21% in the tax-cut law that passed in 2017, with no Democratic support. A recent Morning Consult poll found that 54% of voters favor tax hikes to pay for infrastructure, with only 6% opposing.
The vulnerability for Democrats comes from their razor-thin majorities in Congress—just one seat in the Senate and four seats in the House. There’s already a good chance Republicans will retake the House, if only because the president’s party typically loses ground in the midterm elections. Republicans are defending more open seats than Democrats in the Senate, but they could still benefit from a snapback against Democrats. The implicit message from the business lobby is that it will target the most vulnerable Democrats—such as those in relatively conservative districts—with generous financial support for Republican opponents.