Senate GOP tax bill would add $1 trillion to the deficit, Congress’ analysts conclude

The following article by Erica Werner, Mike DeBonis and Damian Paletta was posted on the Washington Post website November 30, 2017:

The Republican plan for a massive tax overhaul steamed toward Senate passage on Thursday, even as a nonpartisan congressional scorekeeper said the plan would fall short of GOP claims that it would pay for itself.

Joint Committee on Taxation analysis released Thursday afternoon, after senators had already taken initial votes on the bill, concluded the bill would add $1 trillion to the national deficit over a 10-year period, even after the economic growth the bill is projected to create is taken into account.

The Republican bill would raise the gross domestic product by a yearly average of 0.8 percent during the next decade, but the federal revenue generated by that growth would only offset a fraction of the plan’s cost, the analysts found.

Still, Republicans appeared well on track to passing the bill, after picking up support from Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) on Thursday morning, narrowing the number of holdouts.

A few issues remained unresolved, most critically a “trigger” sought by Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) to raise taxes if growth estimates aren’t met. But GOP leaders projected optimism about passing the $1.5 trillion legislation through the Senate on Thursday evening or Friday, a major step forward as President Trump and GOP leaders seek to overhaul the U.S. tax code for the first time in three decades.

“This is not a perfect bill,” McCain said in a statement, “but it is one that would deliver much-needed reform to our tax code, grow the economy, and help Americans keep more of their hard-earned money.”

McCain’s stance on the legislation had been uncertain, and leadership had eyed him warily after he unexpectedly sank their efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act over the summer with a theatrical thumbs-down on the Senate floor.

Republican leaders have little margin for error in the closely divided Senate, where just three defections can sink the bill, as Democrats unanimously oppose it.

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), the top Democrat on the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee, said the late-breaking JCT analysis of the bill’s economic effects — which Republicans have been touting for months — illustrates a mistaken approach.

“This isn’t tax reform at all,” he said. “This is now just a grab bag full of goodies for multinationals and donors and special interests.”

GOP leaders, though, have brushed off the criticism for weeks. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) told reporters Thursday, “We’re certainly optimistic. As you know we had everybody on board to take the bill up. I think everyone is trying to get to yes.”

In a sign that Republicans expect the Senate to clear the bill this week, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) on Thursday told lawmakers in that chamber to return to Washington a day earlier than scheduled next week to cast votes on Monday night to begin the process of resolving differences between the House and Senate bills.

“I strongly encourage all members to be here, present and voting,” McCarthy said on the House floor.

Of the 52 Republican senators, there were just a handful whose stances remained uncertain or undeclared as of early afternoon Thursday, most prominently Sens. Susan Collins (Maine), Ron Johnson (Wis.), Jeff Flake (Ariz.) and Corker.

Corker was holding out for resolution on his trigger proposal, which was encountering procedural difficulties under the complex rules Senate Republicans are using to consider the legislation on the floor. The rules allow them to pass the bill with a simple majority vote, instead of the 60 usually required, but also limit what kind of provisions may be considered.

In one version, the trigger would raise taxes by as much as $350 billion if the economy doesn’t grow by more than 0.4 percent yearly above a baseline established by the Congressional Budget Office.

On Thursday morning, Corker said the pending release of the new JCT analysis — known as a “dynamic score” — could affect the negotiations over the trigger. But he insisted he could not accept a $1 trillion addition to the budget deficit.

“To the extent that dynamic scoring is less than that, that’s the gap that needs to be made up,” he said.

Senators are still debating where the money would come from for that change, as well as other changes other Republicans are seeking. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) was trying to increase a child tax credit. To do so, he would slightly decrease the size of the tax cut the bill proposes to offer corporations. Under the current version of the bill, that rate would drop from 35 percent to 20 percent.

House conservatives were drawing a hard line on that issue. “We have consistently said as low as possible but no higher than 20 percent,” said Rep. Mark Meadows of North Carolina, chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, referring to the corporate tax rate.

Collins was working on several issues, including partially restoring the ability of taxpayers to deduct state and local taxes from their federal tax bill. Flake said he was waiting for a few answers.

Johnson still has not said whether changes made by leadership were enough to satisfy his concerns about the treatment of so-called pass-through businesses, whose owners pay taxes through the individual code rather than at corporate rates. Johnson retains partial ownership of one such business and wants better treatment for them.

Overall, the legislation represents a massive change for the tax code that delivers huge cuts for corporate America and the wealthy, while the benefits for individuals are mixed or in some cases nonexistent, according to multiple nonpartisan analyses.

The Senate GOP tax bill would slash the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 20 percent, starting in 2019. It would also create incentives for multinational companies to bring foreign earnings back to the United States. And it encourages businesses to invest more, allowing them to immediately expense the cost of things like new equipment and machinery.

The bill would temporarily cut taxes on families and individuals, lowering tax rates and expanding the amount of income that isn’t subject to taxation. It would also, temporarily, expand the child tax credit for families earning less than $1 million. But it would also cut back on many tax breaks, prohibiting people from deducting the taxes they pay to states and localities.

Importantly, the bill would also repeal a central element of the Affordable Care Act, which creates penalties for Americans who don’t have health insurance coverage. This is a major plank in President Barack Obama’s signature legislative achievement, and the Senate language, if signed into law, would mark the biggest GOP legislative success in paring back that law.

This change would create more than $300 billion in budget space because of the money that would be saved in Medicaid spending and other programs, but it would also lead health insurance premiums to increase and more than 13 million fewer people to have health insurance in several years, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Democrats railed against the legislation, calling it a giveaway to corporate America that fell fall short of being the middle-class tax cut Republicans promised.

“Senate Republicans are writing a bill that gives huge tax cuts to the richest people in this country,” said Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio).

The bill also polls poorly. But Democrats appeared powerless to stop it as Republicans pushed it forward in desperate pursuit of a political win after failing to pass any major legislation so far this year despite controlling the White House and both chambers of Congress.

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GOP Goes for Win on Taxes, Consequences Be Damned

The following article was posted on the AlterNet website November 29, 2017:

Republicans will do anything for a win, including hurting their constituents.

Credit: Christopher Penler / Shutterstock

An entire year of legislative defeats has grated on the GOP.

Their promised Affordable Care Act repeal failed – again and again and again. Their Muslim ban was, well, banned by the courts. And now, in the waning days of November, their infrastructure bill, big beautiful border wall and brand new NAFTA are all missing.

Republicans have lost so much, they’re downright desperate for a win. And that’s why they’re pushing a tax scam supported by a mere 25 percent of Americans, according to the latest Quinnipiac Poll.

They’ve just got to rack up a win, consequences and American workers be damned. They’re so desperate that GOP Sen. Bob Corker, a self-described deficit hawk, agreed in committee Tuesday to send the bill to the floor for a vote after he got promises for changes. What he wants is cancellation of the bill’s tax breaks if they don’t stimulate economic expansion as Republicans say they will. The GOP keeps swearing the cuts will cause growth despite the fact that the Bush tax breaks didn’t and despite the fact that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects the cuts will add $1.44 trillion to the deficit.   Continue reading “GOP Goes for Win on Taxes, Consequences Be Damned”

Why so Many Americans Hate Trump’s Tax Reform

The following article by Jim Hightower was posted on the creators.com website November 29, 2017:

Sam Rayburn of Texas, who was a legendary Speaker of the U.S. House in the 1940s and ’50s, offered this piece of ethical advice for lawmakers who were conflicted over whether to vote for the People of the lobbyists: “Every now and then, a politician ought to do something just because it’s right.”

Wow, ethics — how quaint! Today’s House Speaker, Paul Ryan, has put his own perverted twist to Rayburn’s ethics, advising his Republican majority to vote for anything just because it’s right-wing. Along with Donald Trump and Senate leader Mitch McConnell, Ryan is now pushing for a rewrite of America’s tax law that’s so far to the right that it’s horribly wrong. Continue reading “Why so Many Americans Hate Trump’s Tax Reform”

Trump touts benefits of tax cuts for ‘the people that like me best’

The following article by John Wagner was posted on the Washington Post website November 29, 2017:

During a speech touting the GOP tax plan in St. Charles, Mo., on Nov. 29, President Trump said his “focus” is to help “the people that like me best.” (The Washington Post)

ST. CHARLES, Mo. — With a critical Senate vote looming, President Trump on Wednesday pitched the Republican tax plan as a boon to his working-class supporters, even as independent analyses have indicated that the wealthy and corporations would be the biggest beneficiaries.

“Our focus is on helping the folks who work in the mail rooms and the machine shops of America, the plumbers, the carpenters, the cops, the teachers, the truck drivers …. the people that like me best,” Trump said in remarks to an enthusiastic, invitation-only crowd of about 1,000 at a convention center in a state that he carried comfortably in last year’s election.

“Really, the people that like me best are those people, the workers,” Trump said. “They’re the people I understand the best. … They came out to vote for me. They came out to vote for us.”

A report released Sunday by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found that the GOP Senate plan would give substantial tax cuts and benefits to Americans earning more than $100,000 a year while the nation’s poorest could be worse off.

By 2027, most people earning less than $75,000 a year would be net losers under the plan, the CBO found. Meanwhile, millionaires and those earning between $100,000 and $500,000 would be big beneficiaries, according to the CBO’s calculations.

Senate Republican leaders have questioned the analysis, which takes into account the projected effects of a provision in the bill that eliminates the requirement that almost all Americans buy health insurance or else pay a penalty. The CBO has calculated that health insurance premiums would rise as a result, leading 13 million to lose insurance by 2027.

Trump appeared upbeat as he addressed the crowd from a stage lined with Christmas trees, urging the Senate to pass the bill in coming days.

“The big day will be either tomorrow or the next day,” Trump said. “I would say, ‘Do it now.’ ”

If the bill passes, the Senate will have to work out differences with the House, which has passed its own version of a tax-cut bill. Trump referred to the process as “a mixer” and said he hopes to have compromise legislation on his desk by Christmas.

“Together we will give the American people a big, beautiful Christmas present,” Trump told the crowd. “You’re going to have something I predict is going to be really, really special.”

Republicans are forging ahead with their promise to overhaul the tax code, even with very little public support for their proposal. (Video: Jenny Starrs/Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

Several recent polls show that more Americans oppose than support the Trump and GOP tax plans. A Quinnipiac poll this month found about twice as many disapproving as approving (52 percent vs. 25 percent), with nearly a quarter offering no opinion.

Polls have also found a widespread perception that the Trump tax plan is geared toward the wealthy. In a Washington Post-ABC News poll this month, 60 percent said his tax proposal favors the rich, while 13 percent thought it favors the middle class, 2 percent said it favors the poor, and 17 percent said it treats all equally. Continue reading “Trump touts benefits of tax cuts for ‘the people that like me best’”

Listen: Booming economy may not yield results GOP is hoping for

The following article by Alexis Simendinger was posted on the Hill website November 30, 2017:

Encouraging economic data and booming financial markets may not produce the political dividends President Trump and Republicans once envisioned.

The Hill’s Reid Wilson explains what voters say they’re most concerned about. 

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How Tax Bills Would Reward Companies That Moved Money Offshore

NOTE:  President Trump has repeatedly stated that by lowering the corporate tax rate, American corporations will be encouraged to bring funds back into this country. Like so much else in this bill, the opposite appears to be the case. 

The following article by Jesse Drucker was posted on the New York Times website November 29, 2017:

An office on the island of Jersey for Appleby, a law firm specializing in offshore holdings. The Republican tax plans would lower rates on corporate profits held overseas to encourage American companies to bring the money to the United States. Credit Andrew Testa for The New York Times

Over the past few decades, some of the largest companies in the United States made a big bet: By stashing hundreds of billions of dollars of profits offshore, they could slash their taxes and bolster their profits.

It would take a generation to see if the strategy would fully pay off, because the law allowed companies only to defer the taxes on overseas earnings, not to permanently avoid them. Would they ever be able to bring the profits back to the United States without incurring huge tax bills?

Some 20 years after the tax-avoiding technique became widespread, it is poised to pay off in a big way. The Republican tax bills making their way through the House and Senate would allow companies to bring nearly $3 trillion in profits home, at greatly reduced tax rates. Continue reading “How Tax Bills Would Reward Companies That Moved Money Offshore”

Trump Wanted a Bigger Tax Cut for the Rich, Ivanka Went Elsewhere

The following article by Jim Tankersley was posted on the New York Times website November 29, 2017:

From left, Republican Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, Ivanka Trump, President Trump’s daughter, and Senator Marco Rubio of Florida spoke at a news conference on expanding the child tax credit last month. Credit Gabriella Demczuk for The New York Times

WASHINGTON — President Trump urged senators this month to repeal the Affordable Care Act’s requirement that most Americans have health insurance and use the proceeds to slash the top tax rate paid by the richest Americans, a suggestion that pitted his priorities against his daughter and Republican senators intent on helping the middle class.

In the end, the president accepted only a partial victory. He got the repeal of the health law’s individual mandate, but gave up on an income tax rate cut that would have directly benefited him personally. Instead, Ivanka Trump and her allies in the Senate prevailed in their push to include an expanded child tax credit.

“This was certainly an uphill battle, especially given that it is not an issue that is as widely understood,” said Senator Mike Lee, Republican of Utah and a leading advocate of the expanded child tax credit. “We didn’t necessarily have the sense that the president was opposed to it. I still don’t have that sense. I think if he had been, things would have worked out differently than they did.” Continue reading “Trump Wanted a Bigger Tax Cut for the Rich, Ivanka Went Elsewhere”

Minnesotans, don’t forget about the tax bill

The following commentary by Lori Sturdevant was posted on the StarTribune website November 17, 2017:

Franken news is just one of the big things going on.

There’s never a good time, I suppose, to learn that one’s U.S. senator groped a sleeping woman while mugging for a camera. Still, it was particularly irritating to be interrupted with the news about U.S. Sen. Al Franken on Thursday just as the U.S. House was passing a mammoth tax bill that’s skewed against Minnesota and other high-tax/high-services states.

How’s an editorial writer supposed to summon readers to think high-minded tax policy thoughts when the day’s news is about other body parts?

That’s not a plea for pity — not entirely, anyway. It’s also a lament on behalf of the 250 people who crammed into the Minnetonka City Council chamber Wednesday night to hear from three DFLers who want to replace one of the architects of the House’s tax bill, five-term Republican U.S. Rep. Erik Paulsen of Minnesota’s Third Congressional District. Continue reading “Minnesotans, don’t forget about the tax bill”

Deeply unpopular Congress aims to pass deeply unpopular bill for deeply unpopular president to sign

The following article by Philip Bump was posted on the Washington Post website November 29, 2017:

Republicans are forging ahead with their promise to overhaul the tax code, even with very little public support for their proposal. (Video: Jenny Starrs/Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

Something odd is happening on Capitol Hill.

It’s not odd that Republicans are pushing for a tax bill that’s tilted toward business and the wealthy. It’s a return to the argument that benefits at the top trickle down to workers in the form of more jobs and better pay. (Whether this would actually happen is a question of its own.) Republicans control the House, they control the Senate, they control the White House. This tax bill is the Republican agenda, and advancing political priorities when you have the majority is how representative democracy works. Continue reading “Deeply unpopular Congress aims to pass deeply unpopular bill for deeply unpopular president to sign”

Senate Officially Begins Debate on Tax Overhaul Bill

The following article by the Roll Call staff was posted on their website November 29, 2017:

Credit: AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

The Senate voted Wednesday to officially begin debating the GOP tax overhaul bill, moving one step closer to a drastic rewrite of the nation’s tax code.

The Senate adopted the motion to proceed to the House-passed tax overhaul bill, 52-48.

The procedural vote had been delayed as senators worked through language that would open a part of Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling.

The chamber will now debate the measure for 20 hours before proceeding to a marathon “vote-a-rama” session, where nearly unlimited amendments can be offered by either party. Continue reading “Senate Officially Begins Debate on Tax Overhaul Bill”