Lodi News-Sentinel

GOP resists Trump’s offer to revisit popular California tax deduction

- By Emily Cadei

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s offhand offer to revisit a popular tax deduction that benefited millions of California­ns met quick opposition from the Republican leader of the Senate Finance Committee on Thursday.

Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley’s office said he had no interest in reopening the discussion on the state and local tax deduction, which Congress capped in the 2017 federal tax overhaul.

“The Senate Finance Committee won’t be revisiting the SALT deduction reforms made in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act under Chairman (Chuck) Grassley’s leadership,” spokesman Michael Zona said in a statement.

Zona called the deduction “a federal subsidy for states to raise taxes on their residents without political consequenc­e,” and called on states “to lower their taxes instead of insisting that taxpayers from lower-tax states subsidize their profligate spending.”

Congress members from high tax states, including California, New York and New Jersey, have been pushing for lawmakers to revisit the $10,000 cap on SALT, one of the most contentiou­s elements of Republican-backed tax code rewrite.

On Wednesday, the president told a group of regional reporters at the White House that he was “open to thinking about that.”

“There are some people from New York who have been speaking to me about doing something about that, about changing things,” the president said. “I’d be open to talking about it.”

Until last year, taxpayers could deduct their state and local tax payments from their federal income taxes if they itemized their deductions.

According to California Franchise Tax Board, approximat­ely 2.6 million taxpayers deducted more than the $10,000 limit in state and local taxes in 2015. Of that group, about 1 million were projected to owe more in taxes in 2018 — to the tune of $12 billion. About $9 billion of that will be paid by about 43,000 California­ns who make $1 million or more.

But some middle-class taxpayers are likely to pay more, too. According to tax board estimates, 751,000 California households with incomes under $250,000 will probably owe a combined $1.1 billion. And given the high cost of living in the state, $250,000 does not feel like nearly as much money as it does in some other parts of the country.

That prompted a backlash from lawmakers in California and elsewhere. Leading the charge on legislatio­n to renew the full SALT deduction is New Jersey Rep. Bill Pascrell, a senior Democrat on the powerful Ways and Means tax writing committee. He told McClatchy in December it was “a priority” for the committee under the new Democratic majority in the House.

On Wednesday evening, Pascrell told McClatchy that he is preparing to introduce a bipartisan bill “very shortly.”

Opposition from Grassley and other Senate Republican­s makes the prospects for passage unlikely, at least in this Congress. As chairman of the Finance Committee, the Iowa Republican controls what taxrelated legislatio­n advances in the Senate.

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