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Americans would pay some income tax under Republican Jindal's plan: WSJ
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[October 07, 2015]
(Reuters) - Louisiana Governor Bobby
Jindal, trying to revive his ailing Republican presidential bid, will
unveil a tax plan on Wednesday whose goal is to make all citizens pay at
least some federal income taxes, the Wall Street Journal reported on
Tuesday.
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"If we have generations of Americans who never pay any taxes, it
will be very easy for them to turn a blind eye to absurd government
spending and to continue to allow our government to bankrupt our
nation," Jindal said in a written statement, according to the
Journal.
The Tax Policy Center estimates that 45.3 percent of households will
pay no federal income taxes this year. Roughly half do not make
enough money and the others qualify for deductions and credits that
reduce their tax burden to zero, the newspaper said.
Jindal will announce his plan in Iowa, the Journal reported. Iowa
holds the first contest to choose the Republican nominee for the
November 2016 presidential election.
Jindal's campaign did not immediately respond to a request from
Reuters for comment.
The 44-year-old governor is lagging badly in opinion polls. A Real
Clear Politics average of recent polls shows him with 0.6 percent
support, near the bottom of a crowded Republican field.
Jindal's plan seeks to compress the current seven income tax
brackets to three, with those in the lowest rung paying a 2 percent
rate, the Journal reported.
It would also eliminate most deductions, including those that allow
millions to pay nothing in federal income taxes, the newspaper said.
Jindal's proposal takes a different approach from those of several
of his Republican rivals.
Businessman Donald Trump, the front-runner in the Republican race,
announced a plan last month in which individuals earning less than
$25,000 a year and married couples earning under $50,000 would pay
no income tax.
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Candidate Jeb Bush, a former Florida governor, proposed a tax plan
last month that he said would eliminate income taxes for roughly 15
million more people.
Jindal wants to eliminate corporate taxes, the estate tax and the
Alternative Minimum Tax, as well as all the taxes in the Affordable
Care Act, the Journal said.
He would scrap itemized deductions, except for some of the biggest
and politically sensitive, such as those for charitable
contributions and mortgage interest, the newspaper said.
Jindal estimates his changes would reduce federal tax revenue by 22
percent over 10 years, the Journal reported.
(Reporting by Eric Beech in Washington; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
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