The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Senate passes landmark tax rewrite

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WASHINGTON: US Senate Republican­s narrowly passed landmark tax reform early yesterday, a critical step toward delivering a monumental legislativ­e victory for President Donald Trump in his first year in office.

After a marathon session that stretched overnight, the chamber voted 51 to 49 in favour of the nation’s largest tax overhaul in 31 years, overcoming stubborn internal Republican resistance and dismissing Democrats angry over last-minute revisions to the bill.

The Senate version and the one passed recently by the House of Representa­tives must now be reconciled into a single bill, and approved again by both chambers, before it can be signed into law.

Both versions dramatical­ly lower the corporate tax rate from 35 per cent to 20 per cent, and include more modest tax cuts aimed at individual­s across all income levels.

The Senate vote amounts to a reversal of fortune for Trump and Republican leaders, whose bill just 24 hours earlier was on the brink of collapse when a handful of Republican deficit hawks balked at the controvers­ial plan’s 1.5 trillion price tag for 10 years.

Eager to claim victory on what may be one of the best days of his presidency so far, Trump tweeted: “We are one step closer to delivering MASSIVE tax cuts for working families across America.”

“Look forward to signing a final bill before Christmas!” he added.

After extensive negotiatio­ns, the bill was salvaged. Tax writers tweaked the 479-page measure deep into the night, leaving Democrats furious over the last-minute, handwritte­n changes to the legislatio­n.

Trump, desperate for a congressio­nal win, has been more active in the legislatio­n’s navigation through Congress than he was with the Obamacare repeal bill that failed earlier this year.

He has repeatedly stressed he wants the tax bill on his desk by year’s end.

Democrats fumed that they received the text – peppered with extensive handwritte­n modificati­ons that earned scorn from opposition lawmakers – only a few hours before the vote.

“We understand they have the votes to pass their bill despite a process – and a product – that no one can be proud of and everyone should be ashamed of,” top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer told colleagues.

Haste and the darkness of night were Trump’s allies in the process, Schumer said. AFP

As the final vote was tallied, grinning Republican­s congratula­ted one another with handshakes, backslaps and hugs.

A trio of Democrats including Senator Ron Wyden, a ferocious opponent of the bill, stood motionless in the back of the chamber.

Mindful of the historic nature of the vote, Vice President Mike Pence presided over the chamber during final passage.

Several Republican­s who had voiced concerns about the bill were ultimately lured by McConnell’s agreement to make changes.

Senators Bob Corker and Jeff Flake, a pair of Trump critics, worried about the impact of the tax cuts on the country’s massive deficit.

A nonpartisa­n congressio­nal tax scorekeepe­r had projected the tax overhaul would add 1 trillion to the deficit, even after accounting for expected economic growth from the plan.

The analysis complicate­d Trump’s argument that the tax cuts would pay for themselves through additional economic growth.

Flake eventually agreed to back the legislatio­n, after receiving assurances from the White House that action would be taken to shield thousands of young ‘Dreamer’ immigrants from deportatio­n.

Corker hoped to offset the cost of the tax cuts by including a rise in the corporate tax rate in later years, but the effort failed.

He was the lone Republican no vote on the bill, but his opposition was not enough to derail it. — AFP

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