No.
Raising taxes does not solve the problem, has not solved the problem, and never will solve the problem.
The problem always has and always will be government spending.
When Reagan cut taxes, government revenue increased. When W. Bush cut taxes, revenue increased. When Trump cut taxes, revenue increased. When you raise taxes, you slow down the economy, and curtail future income. There's a theoretical point where further cutting taxes after that will not increase government revenue, but we've never actually reached it.
The only way that we will pay down the national debt, is by forcing actual fiscal discipline. The only way that that will happen, is a change in the culture, because there's just not enough people who care about the national debt to make it happen right now.
Legally speaking, one thing must happen, and a second thing probably needs to happen in order to get spending under control.
1. Baseline budgeting must be done away with. If you're not familiar with this insane practice, it's where each government department already assumes a % increase to their budget each year. But that's not referred to as growth, if you increase their budget past that, it's considered an increase, and if you slow the rate of growth, that's called a budget cut, even if their budget is still actually growing.
2. Balanced budget amendment. If the Federal Government is not in a formal congressionally-declared war, there will be no deficit spending whatsoever. This should be backed with a measure where if congress fails to pass a balanced budget for two years running, all members of congress are immediately booted from office, and ineligible for re-election in that year.
To think that raising taxes will actually help get the national budget under control shows an unfortunate ignorance of history, and human behavior.