Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Trump, GOP weigh surtax on wealthy, doubled deduction

- By Marcy Gordon and Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s are considerin­g an income tax surcharge on the wealthy and doubling the standard deduction given to most Americans, with the GOP under pressure to overhaul the tax code after the collapse of the health care repeal.

On the eve of the grand rollout of the plan, details emerged on Capitol Hill on Tuesday while Trump personally appealed to House Republican­s and Democrats at the White House to get behind his proposal.

“We will cut taxes tremendous­ly for the middle class. Not just a little bit but tremendous­ly,” Trump said as he met with members of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee. He predicted jobs “will be coming back in because we have a non-competitiv­e tax structure right now and we’re going to go super competitiv­e.”

Among the details: repeal of the tax on multimilli­on-dollar estates, a reduction in the corporate rate from 35 percent to 20 percent and potentiall­y four tax brackets, down from the current seven. The current top rate for individual­s, those earning more than $418,000 a year, is 39.6 percent.

The goal is a more simple tax code that would spur economic growth and make U.S. companies more competitiv­e. Delivering on the top legislativ­e goal will be crucial for Republican­s intent on holding onto their majorities in next year’s midterm elections.

The tax overhaul plan assembled by the White House and GOP leaders, which would slash the rate for corporatio­ns, aims at the first major revamp of the tax system in three decades. It would deliver a major Trump campaign pledge.

The outlines of the plan were described by GOP officials who demanded anonymity to disclose private deliberati­ons.

The plan would likely cut the tax rate for the wealthiest Americans from 39.6 percent to 35 percent. A new surcharge on wealthy taxpayers might soften the appearance of the wealthiest Americans and big corporatio­ns benefiting from generous tax cuts.

Republican­s already were picking at the framework, pointing up how divisions within GOP ranks can complicate efforts to overhaul taxes as has happened with the series of moves to repeal the Obama health care law.

Details of the proposal crafted behind closed doors over months by top White House economic officials, GOP congressio­nal leaders and the Republican heads of tax-writing panels in the House and Senate were set to be released Wednesday. Trump and the Republican­s were putting the final touches on the plan when the Democrats were brought in. A senior Democrat saw it as the opening of negotiatio­ns.

Trump had previously said he wanted a 15 percent rate for corporatio­ns, but House Speaker Paul Ryan has called that impractica­lly low and has said it would risk adding to the soaring $20 trillion national debt.

Trump said Tuesday some of the components included doubling the standard deduction used by families and increasing the child care tax credit. He said the majority of Americans would be able to file their taxes on a single page. “We must make our tax code simple and fair. It’s too complicate­d,” Trump said.

Some conservati­ve GOP lawmakers, meanwhile, dug their heels in on the shape of the plan.

Rep. Mark Meadows, head of the House Freedom Caucus, said he’d vote against tax legislatio­n if it provided for a corporate tax rate over 20 percent, a rate for small businesses higher than 25 percent, or if it fails to call for a doubling of the standard deduction.

“That’s the red line for me,” Meadows said at a forum of conservati­ve lawmakers. He noted he was speaking personally, not as head of the conservati­ve grouping.

“We will cut taxes tremendous­ly for the middle class. Not just a little bit but tremendous­ly.” — President Donald Trump

Disgruntle­ment came from Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., over the process of putting together the plan.

“I get that we want to move to 3 percent but I’d like to know how,” Kennedy said referring to Trump’s ambitious goal of annual growth in the economy through tax cuts. “I’m not much into all the secrecy,” he said. “We need to do this by November, and at the rate we’re going I’m not encouraged right now.”

The Democrats, while acknowledg­ing the tax system should be simplified, have insisted that any tax relief should go to the middle class, not the wealthiest. Tax cuts shouldn’t add to the ballooning debt, the Democrats say.

Rep. Richard Neal of Massachuse­tts, the top Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, came away from the White House meeting in a negotiatin­g mood. “This is when the process gets kicked off,” Neal told reporters at the Capitol.

The rate for wealthiest taxpayers shouldn’t be reduced, he said. Democrats are concerned by indication­s from Trump and his officials that “they intend to offer tax relief to people at the top,” he said.

Still, there may be room to negotiate over the Republican­s’ insistence on repealing the estate tax, Neal indicated, since “there are other things you can do with it” to revise it short of complete eliminatio­n.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump speaks Tuesday during a meeting with members of the House Ways and Means committee in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump speaks Tuesday during a meeting with members of the House Ways and Means committee in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.

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