Chicago Sun-Times

PARTS OF GOP SENATE TAX BILL COULD BE TOUGH SELL IN HOUSE

Republican­s could find some difference­s between House, Senate versions tough to iron out

- BY HERB JACKSON AND ELIZA COLLINS

Senate Republican­s passed their tax bill early Saturday, so the next step will be a conference committee with the House to iron out difference­s with a bill that passed there on Nov. 16.

Some of those difference­s are dollar amounts, with each chamber setting brackets and deductions differentl­y. But there are also substantiv­e difference­s that could face pushback from House members, particular­ly conservati­ves, that have to be resolved before a bill could reach President Trump’s desk.

According to an internal poll of the conservati­ve House Republican Study Committee obtained by USA TODAY, members were most concerned that the Senate bill sunsets individual tax cuts after 2025, delays the reduction in corporate rates until 2019, and continues to charge a tax on high- dollar estates.

The House could just pass the Senate bill and send it to Trump next week, but 97% of study committee members oppose that, and they’re not alone.

“We’re gonna go to conference unless the Senate makes unbelievab­le changes to their bill in the next few days,” Rep. Mark Meadows, R- N. C., who chairs the hard- line House Freedom Caucus, told reporters Thursday.

Meadows said there did not seem to be any irreconcil­able difference­s, however.

“I’m very optimistic,” Meadows said. “On a scale of one to 10, with 10 being the highest that tax reform gets done, I’m at a nine.”

He said he expected a bill on Trump’s desk by the end of the year.

But before that happens, here are some of the rough edges that must be smoothed out.

Corporate rate delay

One of the most significan­t sections of the bill is the mas- sive tax cut for corporatio­ns. Both bills would take the top corporate tax rate from 35% to 20%. However, the Senate cut would happen in 2019, while the House bill would have the 20% rate kick in next year. Conservati­ves see no reason to delay what they believe will be an economic boom from cutting the corporate tax, and some worry about the impact on next year’s midterm elections. “It would mean that the economy wouldn’t improve like it needs to so we would lose the majority in the House and Senate, but the Democrats would take power just in time to take credit for the economy improving because of what the Sen- ate did,” Rep. Louie Gohmert, a hardline conservati­ve from Texas, said.

Eliminatio­n of the estate tax

Currently estates up to $ 5.5 million are exempt from taxes, but both the House and Senate bills would raise that number to $ 10 million, at least to start. However, the House bill would increase the exemption above $ 10 million each year after next year, and eventually eliminate the estate tax after six years.

The Senate bill would leave the tax in place for estates over $ 10 million.

Repeal of the individual mandate

The Senate includes a re- peal of the Obamacare provision that calls for an IRS fine on people who do not purchase insurance. The House bill did not, but not necessaril­y because of pushback from members. Trump started pressing for it to be included in a tax bill after the House had already crafted its bill.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office estimated that within 10 years, 13 million fewer people would have insurance and those who buy it from government- managed exchanges would see rates increase by 10% a year because the pool of patients would be sicker as healthier people opted not to buy coverage.

Moderates, like Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, were calmed by promises from Senate leadership and the president that Congress will advance a pair of separate bills intended to keep premiums down.

Because the House passed a repeal and replacemen­t of Obamacare earlier this year that included eliminatin­g of the individual mandate, such a provision isn’t expected to get significan­t enough pushback to be removed. However, expect some moderate House Republican­s to follow the example of Collins and Murkowski in calling for separate bills to stabilize the marketplac­e.

Immigratio­n

Like the insurance promises that Collins and Murkowski got, Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona voted for the tax bill in part because he was promised he would be part of a Republican effort to prevent deportatio­n of undocument­ed immigrants who were brought to the United States as children.

Flake did not say he was promised a bill to protect socalled “DREAMers” would be passed before the tax bill. But it is not clear the House would make passage of such a bill a priority at all.

Sunset on individual rates

Where the House bill made most of its changes to brackets, credits, deductions and rates for individual­s and families permanent, the Senate bill imposes them only for five years, after which the current tax code would kick back in.

That change, like the delay in the corporate reduction, was aimed at keeping the cost of the overall tax package from exceeding a $ 1.5 trillion limit set by the budget resolution adopted in October.

The so- called “sunset” provision was the No. 1 criticism of the Senate bill by the House Republican Study Committee members. But if the conference committee changes it, that could push the total cost of the bill over the $ 1.5 trillion limit.

 ?? AP PHOTO ??
AP PHOTO
 ?? | AP ?? U. S. Rep. Mark Meadows, R- N. C., chairs the hard- line House Freedom Caucus.
| AP U. S. Rep. Mark Meadows, R- N. C., chairs the hard- line House Freedom Caucus.

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