Mitt Romney's 'embarrassing' 15 percent tax rate confession

The GOP frontrunner finally acknowledges that he pays Uncle Sam a relatively small share of his relatively high income. Will it hurt him with voters?

GOP presidential frontrunner Mitt Romney has a personal fortune of $190 million to $250 million, but pays only 15 percent or so in federal taxes.
(Image credit: Rick Friedman/Corbis)

Mitt Romney is a very wealthy man — his campaign puts the former venture capitalist's fortune at between $190 million and $250 million — who pays a relatively low tax rate. On Tuesday, after fending off months of questions about his taxes, Romney finally disclosed that the amount he pays in federal taxes is "probably closer to the 15 percent rate than anything." The nominal top tax rate is 35 percent, and households earning $50,000 to $75,000 a year pay about 16.5 percent. Romney is able to claim the 15 percent rate for capital gains (investment income) because much of his income comes from "carried interest" — his share of the profits that his old private equity firm, Bain Capital, earns from managing other people's money. Romney also earns money from speaking fees — though he characterized the six-digit amount as "not very much." The GOP presidential frontrunner says he'll release his 2011 tax returns in April. Will this "embarrassing" tax confession hurt Romney?

This is devastating for Romney: "The politics of this are awful for the GOP frontrunner," says Steve Benen at Washington Monthly. While middle-class families struggle through a tough recession, most are paying a higher tax rate than the multi-millionaire "who got rich laying people off." Oh, and that "not very much" Romney earned in speaking fees? More than $362,000 last year alone. "For a candidate already accused of being an out-of-touch elitist... this is clearly another 'uh oh' moment."

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