Establishment Favorite in Ohio Decides to Burn His Campaign to the Ground

(AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)

The GOP’s Senate primary in Ohio has been lively, to say the least. During a recent debate, things got so heated that Mike Gibbons, the establishment’s favorite, and Josh Mandel, who is often seen as more populist, had to be physically separated.

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In a story as old as time, J.D. Vance and Mandel have split one lane of voters while Gibbons leads overall (via polling) by a few points. Early voting has begun, and the actual primary election will be held on May 3rd.

Yet, despite his lead, Gibbons decided to burn his campaign to the ground recently by saying something that might as well have taken from Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign. Here’s what that sounded like.

It’s the weekend, so I’m going weapons-free on gif usage.

How, in this day and age, can a Republican candidate still be unaware of what year it is? Right now, the middle class is getting absolutely toasted by inflation, and a leading GOP candidate for the Senate thinks now is a good time to riff on the unfairness of our tax system to millionaires and billionaires?

And look, I get that he’s kind of half-right in a technical sense. It is true that the highest wage earners pay most of the federal income taxes. Yet, the middle-class pays FICA taxes. They pay sales taxes. They pay state income tax. They pay the gas tax every time they fill up. Insinuating they aren’t “paying their fair share” is misleading at best.

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Secondly, the statistics say that the middle-class pay, on average, around 8 percent of their earnings in federal income tax. That is not zero, as Gibbons insinuates. Heck, I’m middle-class and I’m about to write a $15,000 check to the IRS — despite paying a hefty amount into the system every month (i.e. my overall bill is even bigger than that). I’m sure most people reading this are middle-class and owe money, or that their refund doesn’t fully offset what they paid to the government throughout the year.

Thirdly, Gibbons’ statement makes does not account for the differences in capital gains tax rates and income tax rates. Most of the richest Americans make most of their money through investments after a certain threshold. That means that when you consider everything the wealthy bring in compared to their effective tax rate, the rich pay about the same percentage of their money into the system as the middle class. Now, I’m not suggesting the capital gains tax should be increased, and I understand how important spurning investment is to the economy. But I am suggesting the assertion that the rich are deeply abused when it comes to the overall tax structure just isn’t true.

Lastly, putting all the technical arguments aside, going after the middle-class in the current environment is just politically inept. Gibbons himself is, of course, a very wealthy man, which explains why he’d be stupid enough to even get into this topic. Still, any GOP candidate needs to have enough of a filter to not set themselves on fire. Even if Gibbons, because of early voting, ends up winning the primary, he’s now made himself a liability not just in his own race, but to other Republican candidates around the country.

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I don’t know who else besides Gibbons needs to hear this, but it’s not 2012 anymore. Mitt Romney’s vision of the GOP is never coming back. Stop obsessing over tax rates and start talking about issues that Americans actually care about.

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