The Borneo Post

Trump touts tax reform, tells Congress to deliver

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SPRINGFIEL­D: US President Donald Trump turned his populist rhetoric to tax reform, calling for ‘pro-American’ business tax cuts as a way to create jobs and telling Congress that it needs to deliver.

Speaking at a manufactur­ing company in Springfiel­d, Missouri, Trump called on Democrats to join his tax overhaul effort, which he said would also cut taxes and simplify the sprawling US tax code for the middle class. But he offered few specifics, and tax reform will be an uphill task in Congress.

“We must reduce the tax rate on American businesses so they keep jobs in US, create jobs in US and compete for workers right here in US,” Trump said in his first presidenti­al speech specifical­ly on tax reform, one of his key 2016 campaign issues.

Both congressio­nal Democrats and Republican­s say tax reform is needed but the Republican goal of enacting legislatio­n this year faces a battle in Congress, which has already failed to deliver on healthcare reform sought by Trump.

Trump reiterated his longstandi­ng call for slashing US corporate tax rate to 15 percent from 35 percent at a time when lawmakers believe they could be lucky to bring it down to 25 percent.

Independen­t analysts and lobbyists are increasing­ly pessimisti­c that Congress can act by the end of 2017, and some believe final tax legislatio­n could be more like a straight tax cut than a reform.

“I don’t want to be disappoint­ed by Congress. Do you understand me?” Trump said to cheers. “I think Congress is going to make a comeback, I hope so. I’ll tell you what, the US is counting on it.”

Trump said business tax cuts would lead to higher wages for workers by boosting economic growth and making American companies more competitiv­e, an argument Democrats dismiss as more of the ‘ trickle- down’ economics that they blame for leaving workers behind in recent decades.

“If President Trump’s previous tax plans are any indication, the wealthy and big corporatio­ns will be the ultimate winner,” Representa­tive Richard Neal, the top Democrat on the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said in a statement.

There has been no comprehens­ive overhaul of the tax code since 1986.

Trump singled out Missouri’s Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill, telling voters to throw her out of office in the 2018 midterm elections if she does not get on board with tax reform.

“So we must – we have no choice: We must lower our taxes. And your senator, Claire McCaskill, she must do this for you. And if she doesn’t do it for you, you have to vote her out of office,” Trump said.

McCaskill’s office did not immediatel­y respond to queries from Reuters about Trump’s remark.

Republican­s said Trump’s speech would help underscore tax reform’s priority in Congress, as lawmakers return next week to grapple a number of other vital issues including the US borrowing limit, disaster relief and government funding.

“We are united in our determinat­ion to get this done,” House of Representa­tives Speaker Paul Ryan said in a statement.

But after more than seven months in power, Trump and Republican leaders who control both the US Senate and the House are still far from agreement on a tax package. Initially expected in the spring, tax reform legislatio­n now may not emerge until as late as November, lobbyists say.

Trump set out four tax reform principles: simplicity, a competitiv­e tax code, tax relief for the middle class and internatio­nal corporate tax reform. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Trump turned his populist rhetoric to tax reform, calling for ‘pro-American’ business tax cuts as a way to create jobs and telling Congress that it needs to deliver. — Reuters photo
Trump turned his populist rhetoric to tax reform, calling for ‘pro-American’ business tax cuts as a way to create jobs and telling Congress that it needs to deliver. — Reuters photo

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