Daily Dispatch

Trump on brink of major tax victory after Senate passes new reforms

Republican $1.5-trn plan to have impact on national debt

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THE US Senate narrowly approved a sweeping tax overhaul early yesterday, putting President Donald Trump on the brink of his first major legislativ­e triumph nearly a year after he took office.

Hours earlier, Trump’s $1.5-trillion (R19-trillion) deficit-busting tax cuts cleared the House of Representa­tives, but a rare last-minute snag over parliament­ary rules will force the lower chamber to vote on the updated package once again yesterday.

The deepest rewrite of the US tax code in three decades provides dramatic tax breaks to corporatio­ns, and families at all income levels will see their income tax drop starting next year, with the largest benefits going to the wealthy.

The Republican legislatio­n passed the Senate along strict party lines, 51 votes to 48, with all Democrats united in opposition.

The vote had appeared destined to a dramatic showdown, especially with Senator John McCain’s absence due to cancer treatment meaning Republican­s could afford only one defector.

Vice-President Mike Pence presided over the chamber in the event he need to break a tie. But with senators Marco Rubio and Bob Corker backing off their threats to oppose the bill, it ultimately carried through, and Pence pronounced to loud cheers, “the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is passed”.

In the House, 12 Republican­s had joined all Democrats in opposition as the bill passed 227 to 203.

“Today we are giving the people of this country their money back,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan, who forcefully banged the gavel down as he proclaimed victory.

Trump, who has pushed hard to get the measure across the finish line, noted on Twitter that the bill bounces back to the House, and that if the chamber signs off on the minor changes, as expected, there will be a White House news conference.

Senate Democrats said they demanded that three provisions in the bill – including one allowing the use of savings accounts for home-schooling expenses – be stripped out because they violate the Senate’s so-called Byrd Rule, guidelines on the kinds of legislatio­n that can pass the Senate with just a simple majority.

Democrats seized on the hiccup as proof that Republican­s were rushing to jam the tax cuts through Congress without enough study.

Republican leaders unveiled their final version of the bill only late last week, and Trump has demanded it reach his desk by Christmas.

Should the bill become law, it would be the Republican­s’ most important legislativ­e victory in the 11 months since Trump’s inaugurati­on.

The Republican plan is projected to add nearly $1.5-trillion to the national debt over the coming decade, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation. That figure drops to about $1trillion when economic growth is accounted for.

Ryan stated that a median-income family of four earning $73 000 annually would save $2 059 in taxes next year.

The Democratic opposition has denounced the measure as mostly benefiting companies and the wealthiest Americans – including Trump himself – and warns it risks blowing a hole in the national debt, which has surged past $20-trillion.

Top House Democrat Nancy Pelosi called the bill a “moral obscenity”.

Under the legislatio­n, the federal corporate tax rate would fall from 35% to 21%, and the maximum individual income tax rate, for the nation’s wealthiest, would drop from 39.6% to 37%.

“Every fundraiser, every fat cheque from a billionair­e, and every champagne and caviar party has been about getting to this day, the day when the politician­s they put in charge of Washington would pay them back with a $1.5-trillion giveaway,” said firebrand liberal Senator Elizabeth Warren.

While Republican­s failed earlier this year to repeal and replace Obamacare, the tax plan takes a key step in that regard, by scrapping the individual mandate that requires Americans to have health insurance or pay a fine.

Polls show a majority of Americans are opposed to the tax bill, but Republican­s brushed aside suggestion­s that public opposition to the reforms will hurt their party in next year’s midterm elections. — AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? OVERHAUL: House Ways and Means Committee chairman Representa­tive Kevin Brady speaks to reporters after the House passed tax reform legislatio­n on Capitol Hill on Tuesday in Washington, DC
Picture: AFP OVERHAUL: House Ways and Means Committee chairman Representa­tive Kevin Brady speaks to reporters after the House passed tax reform legislatio­n on Capitol Hill on Tuesday in Washington, DC

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