Global Times

Trump tax reform drive nears milestone

Republican congressme­n to unveil long- awaited initial bill

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US President Donald Trump’s drive to overhaul the US tax system will reach a major milestone on Thursday, when Republican­s in the House of Representa­tives unveil their long- awaited initial bill.

The expected bill will be the starting gun for a frantic race toward what Trump and House and Senate Republican­s hope will be their first major legislativ­e victory: the enactment this year of a tax package seeking up to $ 6 trillion in tax cuts over the next decade for corporatio­ns, small businesses and individual­s.

Congress has not succeeded on comprehens­ive tax reform since 1986, when Ronald Reagan was in the White House and Democrats controlled the House.

Trump said at the White House this week that he wants Congress to pass tax bills by the US Thanksgivi­ng holiday on November 23. House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady has promised to release a full bill on Thursday. But important issues remain unresolved and Brady himself predicts the initial legislatio­n will change next week, when his panel is due to begin preparing it for an eventual House vote.

As Brady’s panel met late into the evening on Wednesday, going over the final details of the tax package, questions remained about how to best handle mortgage interest and 401( k) retirement plans, a federal deduction for state and local taxes, and the tax plan’s projected impact on the federal deficit.

“We’re going to make improvemen­ts at every step,” Brady said.

A compromise that could remove one of the plan’s biggest obstacles – the proposed eliminatio­n of a deduction for state and local tax ( SALT) payments – is expected to be in the bill. The compromise would preserve the deduction for property tax, but not income tax payments.

Lawmakers from high- tax states where upper middle- class voters would be hardest hit by the SALT deduction, have expressed varying degrees of confidence about the compromise.

Representa­tive Tom MacArthur of New Jersey said that his staff is calculatin­g home prices in his district to determine where the property- tax cap should fall. “I think it needs to go up,” he told Reuters.

Representa­tive Lee Zeldin of New York, who favors keeping the full SALT deduction, said on Wednesday there still needs to be “major changes made to the proposals on state and local taxes.”

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