Silly silly young man... let me help you with what Republicans want.
1) We want an economy booming so much due to a favorable investment climate that investors pour their money into America to create new businesses that demand more workers.
Then with secure borders in place, we want the demand for workers to be so intense, that employers have no choice but to offer higher wages to attract workers without any artificial involvement by government.
Meanwhile, the shortage of workers will demand companies reengineer their businesses to be more efficient, thus lower the per unit labor cost even as they pay higher wages and aggressively bid for workers.
This surge in productivity is the single biggest predictor of long term increases in standards of living. Nothing else works... period. Income redistribution does not work... attacking the wealthy does not work... it simply comes down to making labor more valuable and in short supply.
Next besides raising the incomes of Americans, Republicans want the cost of living to drop. That happens in four ways.
First and foremost, cheap and abundant energy which drives the cost of living and standard of living more than any other input for the poor since it drives both energy and food prices. To achieve that we must rework our "green energy" strategy away from the current plan to limit the supply and increase the cost of fossil fuels to making fossil fuels abundant and cheap... and alternative renewable energy even more abundant and even cheaper. This is the opposite of what Biden is pursuing as his policies largely raise the cost of fossil fuel in order to make green energy competitive but doing that will permanently hurt the standards of living of the poor.
Second, we need low taxes on production. If we tax production (payroll taxes, corporate income taxes, etc), we make it hard to make things and workers in particular get hammered by payroll taxes. We need to shift our "business" taxes to consumption taxes, thus lowering the cost of US goods and increasing the cost of foreign made goods. To the average worker this approach will lower the total taxes they pay compared to what they pay today again raising their standards of living.
Third, we need to increase the workforce to address the coming severe worker shortage. Policies like lowering the taxes on seniors who choose to work (currently once they earn above a threshold amount, they lose $1 of social security for every $2 of wages... a 50% tax on top of their regular taxes! We need to target childcare credits to families where both parents are working or single parent families (one parent is working). We need to increase the earned income credit for low wage workers and maintain the current Medicaid expansion program for low wage workers without healthcare at work. Every entitlement besides those for people who are physically or mentally disabled or seniors and children should be reviewed to determine how it contributes to getting people working.
Fourth, we need to increase the value of our workers. First, by offering children living in areas with failing school systems options to attend charter, parochial, online, or private schools through vouchers. We need to make all school systems more accountable to parents and focused on teaching the basics and life skills not ideology.
We should re-do our whole government student loan programs, so anyone with the ability can get tuition loans to vocational schools that will be interest free as long as they make targeted progress towards completing their training and will remain interest free in any year, they work at least 1600 hours. If they don't work 1600 hours, the loans will accrue interest.
We need to limit college loans to those majors identified as being in short supply or with expanding demand. Same deal. Interest free while in college, no interest if working at least 1600 hours per year. The public will bear the "interest cost" of your education if you use it to get a full time job.
In addition, we need to redesign our immigration policies to put an emphasis on skill shortages. With the aging population, we will need skilled workers to replace retiring workers. What we won't need is people that will rely on entitlements, which are government already cannot afford to fund.
Finally, we want reduced federalization. Funny that our progressives embrace diversity as important but fail to recognize diversity is not just a "racial, ethnic, religious" thing, it also reflects that our country has very diverse economies, traditions, and history and that the federal government needs to stop issuing a one size fits all approach to how things operate.
We need to re-visit this trend toward federalization and try to dismantle those elements that interfere with the vitality of our dynamic country.
Imagine a nation, where children grow up with access to a great education rather than be forced into a failing public school. Where they graduate and go on to attend subsequent schools that actually prepare them for good paying jobs that exist with demand. Where employers fight over them and throw money at them to attract them to their companies. And where these same children, now young adults can afford a home and see their standards of living go up. That is what Republicans want... government has a role to play, but that role is not to centrally plan our economy, but rather create an environment where capitalism works.