The bill, which makes the 2017 Trump tax cuts permanent and provides a big funding boost for border security and national defense, was bitterly opposed by Thomas Massie (R-KY) in the House and Rand Paul (R-KY) in the Senate because of its dismal fiscal implications: an estimated $3.3 trillion increase in the national debt over the next decade.
After guest Daniel Newman added that higher taxes would add still more uncertainty amidst President Donald Trump's trade wars, McDowell weighed in. "It's also the creep's way out and I use the word creep because they want to let the top rate creep up the creepy way out of not cutting spending," she argued. "And it's just the fact that we're running more than a $2 trillion deficit this year, it will come in higher than Joe Biden's last year in office."