Senate approves major tax cuts in victory
for Trump
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[December 02, 2017]
By David Morgan and Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate
narrowly approved a tax overhaul, moving Republicans and President
Donald Trump a big step closer to their goal of slashing taxes for
businesses and the rich while offering everyday Americans a mixed bag of
changes.
In what would be the largest change to U.S. tax laws since the 1980s,
Republicans want to add $1.4 trillion over 10 years to the $20 trillion
national debt to finance changes that they say would further boost an
already growing economy.
"We are one step closer to delivering MASSIVE tax cuts for working
families across America," Trump said in an early-morning tweet.
U.S. stock markets have rallied for months in the hope that Washington
would provide significant tax cuts for corporations.
Celebrating their Senate victory, Republican leaders predicted the tax
cuts would encourage U.S. companies to invest more and boost economic
growth.
"We have an opportunity now to make America more competitive, to keep
jobs from being shipped offshore and to provide substantial relief to
the middle class," said Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader in the
Senate.
The Senate approved their bill in a 51-49 vote with Democrats
complaining that last-minute amendments to win over skeptical
Republicans were poorly drafted and vulnerable to being gamed later by
lawyers and accountants in the tax avoidance industry.
"The Republicans have managed to take a bad bill and make it worse,"
said Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer. "Under the cover of
darkness and with the aid of haste, a flurry of last-minute changes will
stuff even more money into the pockets of the wealthy and the biggest
corporations."
No Democrats voted for the bill, but they were unable to block it
because Republicans hold a 52-48 Senate majority.
Talks will begin, likely next week, between the Senate and the House of
Representatives, which has already approved its own tax bill.
Trump wants that to happen before the end of the year, allowing him and
his Republicans to score their first major legislative achievement of
2017, despite controlling the White House, the Senate and the House
since he took office in January.
Republicans failed in their efforts to repeal the Obamacare healthcare
law over the summer and Trump's presidency has been hit by White House
in-fighting and by a federal investigation into possible collusion last
year between his election campaign team and Russian officials.
The tax overhaul is seen by Trump and Republicans as crucial to their
prospects at mid-term elections in November 2018, when they will have to
defend their majorities in Congress.
In a legislative battle that moved so fast a final draft of the bill was
unavailable to the public until just hours before the vote, Democrats
slammed the proposed tax cuts as a give-away to businesses and the rich
financed with billions of dollars in taxpayer debt.
The framework for both the Senate and House bills was developed in
secret over a few months by a half-dozen Republican congressional
leaders and Trump advisers, with little input from the party's
rank-and-file and none from Democrats.
Six Republican senators, who wanted and got last-minute amendments and
whose votes had been in doubt, said on Friday they would back the bill
and did so.
Senator Bob Corker, one of few remaining Republican fiscal hawks who
pledged early on to oppose any bill that expanded the federal deficit,
stood out as the lone Republican dissenter.
"I am not able to cast aside my fiscal concerns and vote for legislation
that ... could deepen the debt burden on future generations," said
Corker, who is not running for re-election.
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U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) leaves the Senate
floor during debate over the Republican tax reform plan in
Washington, U.S., December 1, 2017. REUTERS/James Lawler Duggan
KEY CHANGES
Numerous last-minute changes were made to the bill on Friday and in
the early morning hours of Saturday.
One was to make state and local property tax deductible up to
$10,000, mirroring the House bill. The Senate previously had
proposed entirely ending state and local tax deductibility.
In another change, the alternative minimum tax (AMT), both for
individuals and corporations, would not be repealed in full.
Instead, the individual AMT would be adjusted and the corporate AMT
would be maintained as is, lobbyists said.
Another change would put a five-year limit on letting businesses
immediately write off the full value of new capital investments.
That would phase out over four years starting in year six, rather
than be permanent as initially proposed.
Under the bill, the corporate tax rate would be permanently slashed
to 20 percent from 35 percent, while future foreign profits of
U.S.-based firms would be largely exempted from tax -- both changes
pursued by corporate lobbyists for years.
On the individual side of the tax code, the top tax rate paid by the
highest-income earners would be cut slightly.
The Tax Policy Center, a nonpartisan think tank, analyzed an earlier
but broadly similar version of the bill passed by the Senate tax
committee on Nov. 16 and found it would reduce taxes for all income
groups in 2019 and 2025, with the largest average tax cuts going to
the highest-income Americans.
Two Republican senators announced their support for the bill on
Friday after winning more tax relief for non-corporate pass-through
businesses. These include partnerships and other companies not
organized as public corporations, ranging from mom-and-pop concerns
to large financial and real estate groups.
The bill now features a 23 percent tax deduction for such business
owners, up from the original 17.4 percent.
Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal said Trump controls more than
500 pass-through companies that will directly benefit. "So the
president may be celebrating, but most Americans will rue this day,"
Blumenthal said.
The Senate bill would gut a section of Obamacare by repealing a fee
paid by some Americans who do not buy health insurance, a step
critics said would undermine the Obamacare system and raise
insurance premiums for the sick and the old.
Senator Susan Collins, a moderate Republican, said she obtained
commitments from Republican leaders that steps would be taken later
in separate legislation to minimize the impact of the repeal of the
"individual mandate" fee.
(Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell, Susan Heavey and Richard
Cowan in Washington; Caroline Valetkevitch in New York; Editing by
Kevin Drawbaugh, Kieran Murray and Alexander Smith)
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