Skip to content Skip to footer

Massive Tax Cuts for Wealthy Friends and Corporate Raiders Complete, Cohn Calls It Quits

Since the passage of the tax cuts in December, Cohn likely had little incentive to stay in the White House.

Director of the National Economic Council Gary Cohn listens during a meeting between President Donald Trump and Congress members in the Cabinet Room of the White House February 13, 2018, in Washington, DC. (Photo: Alex Wong / Getty Images)

Just over two months after the Trump administration celebrated its most notable policy achievement of President Donald Trump’s term — passage of massive tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy — the President’s chief economic advisor Gary Cohn, former head of Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs, announced his resignation on Tuesday.

Reportedly over an intractable dispute over a plan by Trump to impose new tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, a policy the top aide had opposed and lobbied against, Cohn’s departure is both the latest exit of a senior White House official and a development met in progressive circles with a collective, “Don’t let the revolving-door hit you on the way out.”

“It has been an honor to serve my country and enact pro-growth economic policies to benefit the American people, in particular the passage of historic tax reform,” said Cohn in a statement. He didn’t mention that by 2027, when the tax cuts are full implemented, how a Tax Policy Center analysis showed that 83% of the benefits of those tax cuts will go to the top 1% wealthiest of taxpayers.

Many noted that since the passage of the tax cuts in December, Cohn likely had little incentive to stay in the White House:

Other widely-shared sentiments on Twitter included:

• “Gary Cohn is an investment banker & former president & COO of Goldman Sachs. His only goal was to pass the #GOPTaxScam. Mission accomplished.

• “After destroying the economy by pushing through #GOPTaxScam Gary Cohn now goes back to Wall Street. Isn’t our revolving door great.

• “Gary Cohn pushes the tax bill through to take care of his top 1% Goldman Sachs buddies. The tariffs are an excuse – he’s simply cashing out.

“It is very telling that for Cohn, a registered Democrat, the final straw in leaving was not Trump’s horrifying response to the Charlottesville white supremacist uber-hate fest or endless attacks on Mexicans and Muslims, but a steel trade enforcement action involving tariffs that would be 5 percent lower than the steel trade action enacted by President George W. Bush in 2002,” said Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch.

“That Cohn is a Democrat,” she continued, “did not stop him from joining the Trump administration, but that his departure would be spurred over a trade policy dispute reveals that his years on Wall Street at Goldman Sachs apparently made his one unbending principle the defense of the corporate-managed trade policies that have outsourced millions of middle class jobs and pushed down Americans wages.”

As journalists Gary Rivlin and Michael Hudson detailed for The Intercept and The Nation’s Investigative Fund last fall, Cohn provided his former colleagues at Goldman, and his friends on Wall Street more broadly, “everything [they] ever wanted from the Trump administration” during his time in Trump’s inner circle.

While some considered Cohn at first an unlikely choice to guide the president, Rivlin and Hudson explained how the Trump economic agenda, it turned out — from privatization schemes to massive deregulation to endless corporate giveaways and tax cuts — was “largely the Goldman agenda, one with the potential to deliver any number of gifts to the firm that made Cohn colossally rich.”

We’re not going to stand for it. Are you?

You don’t bury your head in the sand. You know as well as we do what we’re facing as a country, as a people, and as a global community. Here at Truthout, we’re gearing up to meet these threats head on, but we need your support to do it: We must raise $18,000 before midnight to ensure we can keep publishing independent journalism that doesn’t shy away from difficult — and often dangerous — topics.

We can do this vital work because unlike most media, our journalism is free from government or corporate influence and censorship. But this is only sustainable if we have your support. If you like what you’re reading or just value what we do, will you take a few seconds to contribute to our work?