https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/marc...lass-tax-hikes
With three polls showing her in the lead, 
Sen. Elizabeth Warren,  D-Mass., may soon eclipse former Vice President Joe Biden as the  front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination. That's great  news for Republicans, because Warren has a problem: The central message  of her campaign is that the economy is working for the very wealthy but  it is not working for ordinary Americans. Unfortunately for her,  ordinary Americans disagree.
A Marist poll asked voters whether "
the economy  is working well for you personally." Nearly two-thirds of Americans  said yes. This includes large majorities in almost every demographic  group.
Sixty-seven  percent of college graduates and 64 percent of those without a college  education say the economy is working for them. So do 68 percent of  whites and 61 percent of nonwhite people.
So  do Americans of every generation: 63 percent of Generation Z and  millennials; 69 percent of Generation X; 63 percent of baby boomers; and  69 percent of Greatest Generation and Silent Generation voters.
So  do supermajorities in every region in the country: 60 percent in the  West, 65 percent in the Northeast, 67 percent in the Midwest, and 68  percent in the South.
So do most voters in every type of American  community: 63 percent of both big and small city voters; 64 percent of  small-town voters; 66 percent of rural voters and 72 percent of suburban  voters.
Most everyone, it seems, says the economy is working for them.
The  only groups who disagree, Marist found, are progressives (59 percent),  Democratic women (55 percent) and those who are liberal or very liberal  (55 percent.
So, when Warren declares that President Trump is  "part of a corrupt, rigged system that has helped the wealthy and the  well-connected and kicked dirt in the faces of everyone else," it  resonates with almost no one except those on the political left.
There  is a good reason for that. Unemployment is near a record low, and the  United States has about 1.6 million more job openings than unemployed  people to fill them.
Not only are jobs plentiful, but wages are  rising. And The New York Times reported in May that "over the past year,  low-wage workers have experienced the fastest pay increases."
Americans  don't just think they are doing better in the Trump economy, they are  doing better. Little wonder Democrats barely mentioned the economy in  Tuesday's debate.
This progress is bad news for Warren. Why would  Americans rally to her call for "big structural change" to the economy  when they say the economy is working for them? Especially when they  learn the structural changes Warren is proposing would cost tens of  trillions of dollars and – whether she admits it or not – would require  them to pay more in taxes?
Manhattan  Institute budget expert Brian Riedl recently added up the price tag for  Warren's proposals, and the numbers are staggering: $30 trillion to $40  trillion over 10 years for Medicare-for-all; $2 trillion for Social  Security expansion; $3 trillion for climate change and environmental  policies; $2 trillion free college and student loan forgiveness; and  another $1 trillion for initiatives that include free child care and  housing.
"Total cost: $38 trillion to $48 trillion," Riedl says.  And that's before calculating the cost of offering free government  health care to illegal immigrants, which Warren supports.
There's no way to pay for that miasma of spending with Warren's wealth tax; it will require massive middle-class tax increases.
No  wonder the so-called moderates were going after Warren so hard at  Tuesday's debate; they know it would be a disaster if she were to  capture the Democratic nomination.
To win in 2020, Democrats need  to win over voters who like Trump's policies but don't like Trump. They  can't do that by telling these voters they are wrong about the economy  working for them, and that they need to make peace with socialism.  Instead, they need to convince voters that they can dump Trump and still  keep their prosperity.
If  Democrats nominate Warren, they will give voters suffering from Trump  exhaustion no safe harbor. Her nomination would turn the election into  an existential threat to the American economy.
And since Warren  said Tuesday that, if she is elected, and Democrats take back the  Senate, they will "repeal the filibuster," she will be able to pass her  radical agenda by simple majority vote. That means Trump's message –  "whether you love me or hate me, you have got to vote for me" – will  ring true for millions of Americans whose votes might otherwise be up  for grabs.
Marc  Thiessen is a columnist at The Washington Post, a Fox News contributor  and a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. Thiessen served as  chief speechwriter to President George W. Bush and to Defense Secretary  Donald Rumsfeld.
Thiessen is hardly a Trumpist - but he got correct the economic implications of the socialism the DPST's are trying to foist on America.