The 2024 election will either put Donald Trump back in the White House or see the U.S. elect its first female president in Kamala Harris. Either way, the margin of victory is likely to be razor-thin. Polls conducted just after President Joe Biden announced he would no longer seek a second term suggest the election could be decided by voters in a handful of swing states: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
The election could have a major impact on the engineering industry. Harris and Trump are likely to take divergent approaches on key issues affecting engineers. Here’s how the two candidates may approach those issues, including tax policy, global trade, energy, infrastructure, and immigration, according to a bipartisan group of election and policy experts.
In 2017, the Trump Administration championed a series of tax cuts for individuals and corporations that The Wall Street Journal called “the most far-reaching overhaul of the U.S. tax system in decades.” But in 2025, those tax cuts for individuals—which include owners of many engineering firms—will expire. That means the president for the next four years will have to either push Congress to keep the cuts in place or allow taxes to rise.
“Trump will not want his signature law to expire at all and has proposed cutting rates even more,” says Rodney Davis, a Republican who represented Illinois’ 13th district in Congress for a decade and who serves as head of government affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. On the other hand, Davis believes Harris may let the Trump tax cuts expire.
While Trump says he’ll either keep the corporate tax rate at 21 percent or lower it to 20 percent, Harris publicly supports raising the corporate tax rate from 21 percent to 28 percent. Her campaign also told Politico in July that she would not raise taxes on individuals making less than $400,000 per year.
“That touches our industry in terms of our members who operate passthrough firms,” says Steve Hall, executive vice president at ACEC. “S corps, partnerships, and LLCs are taxed on the personal rates. But an even bigger issue for those firms is the Section 199A 20 percent tax deduction for passthrough businesses. That expires along with the personal income tax cuts next year.”
“Both of them are protectionists. They both are not afraid to use the hammer of tariffs to get their way.”
RODNEY DAVISHEAD OF GOVERNMENT AFFAIRSU.S. CHAMBER OF COMMERCEREPUBLICAN AND FORMERCONGRESSIONAL REPRESENTATIVEILLINOIS’ 13TH DISTRICT
In early 2024, the Biden-Harris Administration also proposed a 25 percent minimum tax on the nation’s highest income earners, including on their unrealized capital gains.
One of the signature pieces of legislation from the Biden-Harris Administration was the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), a $1.3 trillion bipartisan package that has funded improvements to the nation’s roads, bridges, and water systems, as well as hundreds of other projects. The IIJA will continue to be overseen by whomever wins the White House until it expires on September 30, 2026.
While the funding distributed to the states through established formulas has flowed fairly efficiently, an analysis by the nonpartisan Brookings Institution recently found that 80 percent of the bill’s “competitive funding” from its discretionary grant programs has yet to be awarded.
“Trump and Congressional Republicans might prefer to see individual surface transportation, aviation, and water bills instead of one large funding package.”
STEVE HALLEXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENTACEC
“I think that’s going to be among the most important things for engineers,” says Cheri Bustos, a Democrat who spent a decade serving Illinois’ 17th Congressional district and is now a partner at Mercury, a public strategy firm. Bustos credits the Biden-Harris Administration for getting that bill and the $52.7 billion CHIPS and Science Act, which provides subsidies to semiconductor manufacturing facilities in the U.S., through a highly divided Congress. And she says her hope is that a Harris presidency might include enactment of a second large-scale infrastructure bill after the current one expires.
While Trump is likely to follow through on the IIJA’s funding until it expires, at that point, “Trump and Congressional Republicans might prefer to see individual surface transportation, aviation, and water bills instead of one large funding package,” Hall says.
Davis adds that Trump would likely also focus on regulatory reforms that can help accelerate infrastructure investment. “A Trump Administration’s infrastructure plan is going to focus on permitting reforms and flexibility and simplicity,” he predicts.
On energy policy, Davis says, “I’m not sure the two candidates have anything in common.”
The chasm between Harris and Trump on energy is partly a philosophical one. Experts say Trump’s emphasis is on boosting domestic energy production, while the Biden-Harris Administration’s energy policies have been primarily seen through the lens of climate change. Even before she was elected as vice president, Harris advocated for policies aimed at helping poor and minority communities that she believed had been disproportionately affected by pollution.
That environment-minded approach, as Bustos sees it, has and would continue to produce new jobs under a Harris presidency. “If we can get wind and solar and even nuclear in a better place, which a Harris Administration would do, it’s going to be better for the planet,” she says. “And it still creates a lot of jobs. It’s a major investment that requires governmental help to get it in all the right places.”
To provide some of that help, the Biden-Harris Administration leveraged $375 billion that was set aside for climate initiatives in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act (a bill for which Harris cast the tie-breaking vote in the Senate). The money has been used to increase production of electric vehicles (EVs), among other green technologies.
Trump could take a much different approach—seeking to boost domestic oil production through increased drilling incentives and tax cuts for oil, gas, and coal firms. “A Harris Administration is going to continue to push to restrict our baseload-generating fuels like coal and natural gas,” Davis says. “That’s going to raise energy rates and lessen reliability in the long term. A second Trump Administration will try to push back against some of those mandates that have been put forth by the Biden-Harris Administration already.”
To that end, Trump has suggested that he would eliminate the emissions limits on cars and trucks that Biden had proposed. If those limits are put into effect, 35 percent of the new vehicles sold in the U.S. by 2032 will need to be electric.
Whatever voters may think of the candidates’ overall divergent takes on energy, they’re likely to pay attention to one specific metric as Election Day approaches: gas prices. Kyle Kondik, elections analyst at the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, says that the high gas prices that have come and gone under the Biden-Harris Administration hurt Biden, and that “if we see high gas prices in the months leading up to the election, you would think that would be better for Trump than for Harris.”
While the candidates may take very different approaches to energy, they have some surprising similarities on global trade. “Both of them are protectionists,” Davis says. “They both are not afraid to use the hammer of tariffs to get their way.”
Trump certainly proved that during his presidency. He imposed more new tariffs on imports than any president had in almost 100 years, according to The Economist. And Trump now promises more of the same, should he return to the White House. He has backed something he calls the “Trump Reciprocal Trade Act,” which would give him, as president, broad leeway to impose tariffs on any country that imposes levies against U.S. goods. He also has floated the idea that tariffs might replace at least some—if not all—personal income taxes. And he has proposed a 10 percent tariff on all goods coming into the country. Plus, Trump has suggested both a 60 percent tariff and a 100 percent tariff on all imports from China.
On China, the candidates have common ground. During his presidency, Trump slapped a 27.5 percent tariff on all vehicles from China and upped tariffs on a range of other products. The Biden-Harris Administration left many of those tariffs in place and in May announced even higher tariffs on an array of products from China—25 percent on steel and aluminum, 50 percent on semiconductors and solar panels, and 100 percent on EVs. That levy on EVs is four times higher than the Chinese EV tariff under President Trump—a move designed to protect the burgeoning EV industry in the U.S., which is growing in part because of tax subsidies.
“We have an EV battery plant that’s under construction in my home state of Illinois that’s more than a $2 billion investment,” Bustos says. “These are major investments, major job creators, major construction projects. The tough talk on China is popular, but we also need to make sure we get these major investments in job creation and a future EV world right.”
Harris has indicated support for an economic cooperation agreement called the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity that the Biden-Harris Administration developed with 13 other countries in the region. Trump, however, has promised that he would “knock out” that deal if he returns to office.
Trump and Harris agree that the U.S. immigration system needs to change. But they have vastly divergent ideas of what that change should look like.
Trump has proposed multiple methods for deterring migrants from coming to the U.S. and for pushing out those who enter illegally. He has said he’d renew his ban on immigration from some predominantly Muslim countries, as well as end birthright citizenship. Trump has also called for a mass deportation of immigrants who have entered the country without permission—including those who have lived in the U.S. for long periods of time.
“If we can get wind and solar and even nuclear in a better place, which a Harris Administration would do, it’s going to be better for the planet. And it still creates a lot of jobs.”
CHERI BUSTOSPARTNERMERCURYDEMOCRAT AND FORMER CONGRESSIONALREPRESENTATIVEILLINOIS’ 17TH DISTRICT
“If we see high gas prices in the months leading up to the election, you would think that would be better for Trump than for Harris.”
KYLE KONDIKELECTIONS ANALYSTCENTER FOR POLITICS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
The differences between the candidates on immigration extend to highly skilled immigrants, including those who apply for H-1B visas. Many business groups, ACEC included, have pushed to expand the number of H-1B visas granted annually. They’re now capped at 65,000 per year for new workers, with an additional 20,000 H-1B visas granted to people who obtain a graduate degree from a U.S. university. ACEC and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, among other groups, have argued that’s far too low a number. In 2024, almost 480,000 people entered the lottery for the 85,000 available visas. But expanding the number of visas has proved vexing for lawmakers in Congress. “It’s always been tethered to this larger debate over border security and some of the more controversial elements of immigration reform,” Hall says.
The Trump Administration enacted a handful of H-1B visa restrictions, at least one of which has been maintained under the Biden-Harris Administration. Trump has also backed off a bit on the harsh rhetoric he has lobbed at the H-1B visa program in the past. Before the 2016 election, he called the program “very bad” and “unfair” to U.S. workers. Harris has expressed support for the H-1B visa program and in 2019 proposed eliminating the per-country ceiling on green cards for permanent residents.
On visas and immigration, much like on energy and trade and infrastructure and taxes, Harris and Trump have some deep differences. But in assessing them head-to-head, ACEC’s Hall cautions that what they may say on the stump could end up being different from what they do once in the White House. “I think you have to take some of the rhetoric with a grain of salt,” Hall says. “We are in an election season, and what we hear in that context now and what actually gets implemented in the policy next year may be two different things.”
Joseph Guinto was a White House correspondent for Investor’s Business Daily and has written for Politico, The Atlantic, Texas Monthly, and the Washingtonian. He lives in Washington, D.C.
This article was written and fact checked to reflect the candidates’ views as of August 14, 2024.
WHERE THEY STAND ON THE BIG ISSUES
TAXESPledged to keep tax rates unchanged for households earning under $400,000 a year. Supports increasing the corporate tax rate to 28 percent. In the past, has supported raising the tax rate for the top 1 percent of earners to 39.6 percent.
INFRASTRUCTUREAlong with Biden, championed the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, and some believe she might support a second such package when the IIJA expires in 2026.
ENERGYBacks expansion of green technology initiatives. Said in 2024 that she would not ban fracking if elected, which she promised to do in 2019 if elected president.
GLOBAL TRADESupported the Biden-Harris Administration’s higher tariffs on multiple products from China, including a 100 percent levy on EVs. Also expressed support for the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity with 13 other countries.
WORKFORCE AND IMMIGRATIONSupported a Senate bill that would have provided $14 billion for increased border security. Has vowed to block the deportation of participants in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. As a senator, said she would support eliminating the per-country cap for green cards for permanent residents.
TAXESProposes to extend the 2017 tax cuts he championed when they expire in 2025. Also suggests lowering the corporate tax rate to 20 percent and has suggested the possibility of replacing income taxes with tariffs.
INFRASTRUCTUREHas proposed an array of regulatory reforms intended to speed infrastructure projects along.
ENERGYWants increased drilling for oil on public lands. Plans tax cuts for oil, gas, and coal firms. Proposes to eliminate the emissions limits enacted by the Biden-Harris Administration and withdraw from the Paris Climate Accords for a second time.
GLOBAL TRADEBacks multiple new tariffs, including a possible 10 percent tariff on all goods coming into the country and as much as a 100 percent tariff on all imports from China. Says he’ll withdraw from the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity.
WORKFORCE AND IMMIGRATIONProposes to renew a ban on immigration from some predominantly Muslim countries, end birthright citizenship, and conduct a mass deportation of those who have entered the country without permission. Has called the H-1B visa program “very bad” and “unfair” to U.S. workers, and has sought new restrictions on it.