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CommentaryPolitics

Rep. Trone: Harris’s economic vision isn’t unrealistic. I know because I’ve lived it

By
David Trone
David Trone
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By
David Trone
David Trone
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November 1, 2024, 12:35 PM ET
David Trone is the Democratic member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Maryland's 6th district and the founder and owner of Total Wine & More.
David Trone is the Democratic member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Maryland's 6th district and the founder and owner of Total Wine & More.
David Trone is the Democratic member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Maryland's 6th district and the founder and owner of Total Wine & More.Courtesy of David Trone

In recent weeks, Vice President Harris has traveled to high school gymnasiums and packed arenas to outline her economic vision for America. While the Biden-Harris administration has made historic investments in clean energy jobs and cutting-edge manufacturing, it is clear to me that Harris’ most recent proposals share the fundamentals of America’s most foundational economic achievements, from the New Deal to the G.I. Bill. In the final stretch of her campaign, Kamala Harris is delivering a proven playbook to make our economy work for everyone. I know because I’ve lived it.

The son of a World War II combat veteran and a public school teacher, I grew up on a 200-acre chicken and hog farm in East Berlin, Pennsylvania. We were fortunate to never go hungry, but my parents always struggled to get by, let alone get ahead. For years, my father suffered from debilitating alcoholism, eventually losing our farm and home to bankruptcy. With four younger siblings, I decided to take out student loans and learn the skills I needed to support them.

One year later, while attending the Wharton School of Business, I started my own business: a beer warehouse on 29th Street in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. As my brother and I constructed checkouts and coolers with cheap plywood and paint, we reaped the benefits of small business loans and tax credits—lifelines for first-time business owners like us.

In the years that followed, we were empowered by those tools to grow from one corner store to two, expand to another town then to another state, creating hundreds and later thousands of jobs in the process. But my story is not one in a million—it is one of the millions. According to the Small Business Administration, small businesses have created 66% of employment growth in the U.S. over the past 25 years and contribute nearly half of the GDP. By lowering the barrier to entry for small business loans, especially for historically underserved communities, and bolstering financial incentives for companies generating good-paying jobs, America’s Main Streets will thrive. We have history to prove it.

As our company grew over the years, so did our tax rate. But let me assure you: the corporate tax rate was never a factor in whether or not I built a new store or negotiated lower prices for my customers—and we always paid what we owed. Today, Trump’s tax cuts have permitted America’s richest corporations to pay less in federal taxes than our teachers and firefighters. According to a 2021 report by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, at least 55 of the largest corporations in America paid no federal corporate income taxes despite enjoying substantial pretax profits in the United States.

Even worse, the vast majority of companies did not use these tax cuts to hire new employees but rather put the money toward stock buybacks for their shareholders and executives. This is a shame and has done nothing for American families but balloon the national debt and make it harder for low- and middle-income Americans to save for the future. Kamala Harris has pledged to raise the corporate tax rate to where it should be and close costly tax loopholes leveraged by the ultra-rich—allowing folks earning $400,000 or less to not pay a penny more in taxes but increasing our country’s tax revenues and ability to better invest in our communities.

This election, we have a real opportunity to chart a stronger course. We need a president who supports America’s bold entrepreneurs by expanding opportunities for those investing in themselves, their employees, and a brighter future for our economy. We need a president who recognizes that the power of the United States lies in its people: the same people who rise before dawn to build our roads, educate our children, and take our country to new heights. We need a president who forges a wider path toward the American Dream for all, not just the privileged few.

I believe in Kamala Harris because leaders like her once believed in a farmer’s son who had nothing but a good idea.

More must-read commentary published by Fortune:

  • Former Intel CEO Craig Barrett: Splitting up America’s leading chipmaker is a bad idea
  • We led some of America’s largest companies. Here’s why we are voting for Harris, not Trump
  • How the Democrat-leaning news media is unwittingly aiding Trump
  • As activist Starboard engages constructively, here’s a potent prescription for Pfizer’s future success under Dr. Bourla’s watch

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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