Stabroek News

Trump tax overhaul under intensifyi­ng fire as Congress readies bill

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - President Donald Trump’s plan for overhaulin­g the U.S. tax system faced growing opposition from interest groups on Sunday, as Republican­s prepare to unveil sweeping legislatio­n that could eliminate some of the most popular tax breaks to help pay for lower taxes.

Republican­s who control the U.S. House of Representa­tives will not reveal their bill until Wednesday. But the National Associatio­n of Home Builders, a powerful housing industry trade group, is already vowing to defeat it over a change that could affect the use of home mortgage deductions, while Republican leaders try to head off opposition to possible changes to individual retirement savings and state and local tax payments.

Trump and Republican­s have vowed to enact tax reform this year for the first time since 1986. But the plan to deliver up to $6 trillion in tax cuts for businesses and individual­s faces challenges even from rank-and-file House Republican­s.

House and Senate Republican­s are on a fast-track to pass separate tax bills before the Nov. 23 U.S. Thanksgivi­ng holiday, iron out difference­s in December, send a final version to Trump’s desk before January and ultimately hand the president his first major legislativ­e victory. Analysts say there is a good chance the tax overhaul will be delayed until next year.

The NAHB, which boasts 130,000 member firms employing 9 million workers, says the bill would harm U.S. home prices by marginaliz­ing the value of mortgage interest deductions as an incentive for buying homes. The trade group wants legislatio­n to offer a tax credit equaling 12 percent of mortgage interest and property tax payments but says it was rebuffed by House Republican leaders.

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