Class-War Economics Is Counterproductive and Un-American

By David Harsanyi

March 20, 2026 6 min read

Perhaps the biggest myth in American political life is that the wealthy don't pay their "fair share." And yet, class warfare isn't merely at the center of the Democrats' economic messaging and policy — it's become the entire game.

Democrats have two new tax plans out, playing on the notion that the middle and working classes are unduly burdened by taxes. One is by Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), which would exempt anyone making $46,000 or married couples making less than $92,000.

Then there is Sen. Cory Booker's (D-N.J.) Keep Your Pay Act, which would effectively eliminate federal income tax on individuals making below $37,500, and $75,000 for couples.

The United States is already home to one of, if not the most, progressive tax systems of any developed nation in the world. The wealthiest pay the preponderance of our federal income taxes. The Treasury Department estimates that the top 10% of households pay down around 80% of all federal income taxes. The top 1% pay 40%. The bottom 50% of workers pay around 3% of the federal tab.

But no politician, certainly none who wants to be in office very long, is ever going to advocate raising middle-class or working-class income taxes ever again, despite the ever-increasing cost of government and debt.

Who cares, right? The rich can afford it.

There are many reasons to flatten taxes rather than make them more lopsided. Free-market economists, for instance, will tell you that it's harmful to rely on a narrow tax base that makes revenue streams more volatile and vulnerable to the behavioral changes of a few people. And that's true.

Others will tell you that in a healthy, free society, everyone feels the benefits and pain of government policy. If voters internalize the fact that income taxes will never rise, they are untethered from the cost of their political decisions. They become increasingly pliable to new and increased spending without any concern for its effects. Everyone simply expects someone else will pay, either future generations or their wealthier neighbors.

Me? I like to point out that it's not your money, commie. Progressives believe they have first dibs on your property simply because you're well off. It's un-American.

Taxation has gone from being a means of funding communal needs, national projects and defense to a means of technocratic wealth reallocation. In this regard, Democrats are quite open about their intentions. The goal is to create a European-style welfare state in the U.S., despite the average American enjoying a far better economy by virtually every quantifiable measure.

In any event, our tax revenue can't even support our existing entitlement programs. To create social welfare on a European scale, Democrats would need to significantly raise income taxes on the middle and working classes to broaden the base. Democrats want this utopian welfare state paid for by a sliver of the population.

Indeed, that sliver drives new investment and economic growth. Yet, another Booker plan, supported by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), former Vice President Kamala Harris and numerous other Democrats, is to tax "unrealized gains," as well.

Today, an investor who sells stocks or real estate is taxed on the profits, or capital gains. High taxes on capital gains already discourage investment. But Democrats want to tax the wealthy on investments they still hold and on profits they may never realize, by employing a bunch of government agents to assess what they may make in the future.

Why? Because it's easy and lazy to blame "corporations," "Wall Street barons" and the ultra-rich for your problems.

Meanwhile, red states have been flattening, cutting or eliminating income taxes. Since 2021, 23 states have cut their top income-tax rates. At the same time, blue states are raising taxes on top earners to try to keep up with state spending and mollify the increasingly radical leftists of their base.

These policies are surely one of the reasons there has been a significant migration from places such as California, New York and Illinois to Texas, Florida and other fiscally conservative states that don't have an income tax.

It's not merely states. In New York City, for example, rising lefty star Mayor Zohran Mamdani is proposing another tax-the-rich hike to close the budget deficit.

To be fair, the modern Democratic politician has no other idea. Their socialistic zero-sum economics policies, driven by resentment and division, rest on the notion that if wealthy people win, poor people lose. No matter how often this thinking has proven destructive, they won't give it up.

David Harsanyi is a senior writer at the Washington Examiner. Harsanyi is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of five books — the most recent, "How To Kill a Republic," available now. His work has appeared in National Review, the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Reason, New York Post and numerous other publications. Follow him on X @davidharsanyi.

Photo credit: Alexander Grey at Unsplash

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