Discord among Republicans already weighs
on Trump's tax plan
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[October 07, 2017]
By Amanda Becker and David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Disagreement among
U.S. congressional Republicans is already swirling around a tax cut plan
unveiled days ago by President Donald Trump, who has proposed repealing
the tax on inheritances and eliminating a deduction for state and local
tax payments.
The discord shows the difficulty of overhauling the complex U.S. tax
code. This task has defied Washington since 1986, the last time a
comprehensive rewrite was completed despite lobbyists who defend each
tax break.
Trump has yet to score a major legislative win since taking office in
January and is pushing hard for a tax code revamp. But his plan is
meeting the same internal Republican tensions between moderates and
conservatives that have sunk his efforts this year to repeal the
Obamacare health law.
"There's a lot of give and take," Trump economic adviser Gary Cohn told
Fox Business Network on Friday.
Members of the administration "have been meeting everyday with the tax
writers trying to figure out where they need to end up to get the votes
... we're going to make sure the president gets what he asks for," he
added.
One obstacle is the projected fiscal impact of the plan, which would
slash U.S. revenues and expand the federal deficit and the national
debt, which now exceeds $20 trillion.
Republican lawmakers from high-tax states such as New York exited
meetings this week with Kevin Brady, chairman of the House of
Representatives' tax-writing committee, saying there would be some sort
of compromise on repealing the deduction for state and local tax
payments.
Separately, some Republican senators were questioning the repeal of a 40
percent inheritance tax levied on estate assets worth more than $5.5
million, or $11 million for married couples. That tax affects only about
0.2 percent of estates, according to the Tax Policy Center, a Washington
think tank.
"That is not a priority for me as we seek to craft this tax bill,"
Senator Susan Collins, who has often been a key Republican vote, said in
a statement on Thursday.
Republicans want to use a procedure known as budget reconciliation to
pass eventual tax legislation, which allows passage with a simple
majority in the 100-seat Senate. Republicans hold 52 Senate seats and
can only afford to lose support from two senators, with Vice President
Mike Pence able to cast a tie-breaking vote. Democrats will likely
oppose the legislation.
One Republican fiscal hawk, Senator Bob Corker, has already said he
cannot support tax legislation that adds to the annual federal deficit.
"We remain very bearish on any tax legislation passing this year - or
next," Cowen and Co analyst Chris Krueger said in a Friday research
note.
The Trump plan, made public last week, calls for up to $6 trillion in
tax cuts over 10 years. Without accompanying spending reductions, the
budget would hugely expand the deficit, according to some estimates.
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President Donald Trump meets with a bipartisan group of members of
Congress, including U.S. Representative Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ) (L)
and Representative Tom Reed (R-NY) (R), at the White House in
Washington, U.S. September 13, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The administration contends tax cuts would spur so much economic
growth that the resulting new revenues would help offset the cost.
In addition, Republicans are proposing "revenue raisers," such as
ending the deduction for payments of state and local tax, known as
SALT. Doing that would raise about $1.3 trillion over a decade, the
Tax Policy Center said.
Almost 30 percent of taxpayers currently deduct state and local
taxes. In New Jersey, for example, 41 percent of tax filers, meaning
individuals or married couples, claimed the deduction, which
averaged $17,850, according to a Government Finance Officers
Association analysis of Internal Revenue Service data.
Although the deduction disproportionately benefits people in
high-tax states and localities, individuals in all states claim it.
In Georgia, for example, 33 percent of tax filers claim an average
deduction of $9,158, the report said.
Republican Representative Chris Collins of New York, a Trump ally,
told reporters earlier this week that lawmakers from high-tax
states, such as his own, were discussing "ways to level the playing
field," including capping the amount of the deduction or putting
other limits on it.
"There are many districts with Republican members where state and
local deduction is used by a large portion of the taxpayers," said
Frank Sammartino, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center. "So it's
not surprising that it's not strictly a blue state/red state thing."
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer called the state and local
tax deduction the "Achilles' heel" of tax reform and said his party
would oppose any move to repeal it. He dismissed compromise plans as
unfeasible.
Brady said on Thursday that at this point there has been no change
to the framework, but tax writers are "listening very carefully" to
lawmakers' concerns.
"It's got to be frustrating when you're in a state where local and
state officials really put the screws to taxpayers," Brady told
reporters. "We are determined to provide tax relief to every
American, regardless of where they live."
(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan; Writing by Amanda Becker;
Editing by Leslie Adler and Lisa Von Ahn)
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