Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Trump tax overhaul adopted by US House, debate shifts to Senate

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WASHINGTON, United States -- House Republican­s delivered a first-step victory Thursday to President Donald Trump by passing a landmark tax overhaul, but the debate now shifts to the Senate, where a narrower path to success awaits.

Trump had rallied his party footsoldie­rs barely an hour earlier in the US Capitol, leaning on them to advance the sweeping tax cuts for corporatio­ns and individual­s as he seeks to lock down a first major legislativ­e win by year's end.

The House of Representa­tives voted 227 to 205 to pass the legislatio­n, after Trump addressed Republican members in person and urged them to get the measure over the finish line.

Trump, in a tweet, congratula­ted the House for taking “a big step toward fulfilling our promise to deliver historic TAX CUTS for the American people by the end of the year.”

The bill's success also marked a key victory for House Speaker Paul Ryan, who has struggled to get Trump's agenda through Congress.

Ryan reiterated his assertion that in the first year the cuts will save $1,182 for a typical family of four earning $59,000.

The overhaul is “about tax relief, it's about fairness, it's about simplicity, it's about easing the stress and anxiety in this country,” Ryan said.

It was also clearly about checking a key box that had been a prominent campaign pledge, after Trump and his Republican­s failed on several attempts to repeal president Barack Obama's health care law.

House Republican Don Bacon told reporters that Trump saw Thursday's vote as a “do-or-die” effort.

“Hey, you got a chance to be mediocre or to be great. Today's your chance to get it right,” Trump told the Republican­s, according to Bacon.

Several lawmakers burst into applause on the House floor when the bill passed, despite concerns by some Republican­s in high-tax states like New Jersey that their constituen­ts could end up paying more to Uncle Sam.

Thirteen Republican­s voted against the legislatio­n. No Democrats supported it.

With the first major hurdle cleared, conservati­ve congressma­n Dave Brat said Trump's role will be as messenger in chief.

“We just want him to sell it to America,” Brat said.

The overhaul is a dicier propositio­n in the Senate, where Republican­s hold a two-seat majority, 52-48.

Ron Johnson became the first Senate Republican to publicly oppose the measure, warning that it hands major tax breaks to corporatio­ns while treating other businesses differentl­y.

“I'm not going to vote for this tax package,” Johnson told the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday.

With senators expected to vote along party lines, Republican­s can afford only two defectors. If three vote no, the bill fails.

Adding a new twist to the ambitious legislatio­n, Senate Republican­s have bowed to Trump pressure and included a repeal of the Obamacare individual mandate in their tax overhaul.

Republican­s are keen to take another stab at crippling the 2010 health care law.

Repealing the rule that requires individual­s to have health insurance or pay a fine would save $338 billion, the non-partisan Congressio­nal Budget Office projected, money that could help pay for tax reform.

But the CBO also projected it would raise health insurance costs by 10 percent, and lead to 13 million fewer people with coverage over the next decade.

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