Lodi News-Sentinel

Biden disappoint­s Dems, leaving state and local tax deduction caps in place

- Laura Davison and Kaustuv Basu

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s decision, in a raft of individual tax proposals released Wednesday, to leave in place a cap on state and local tax deductions threatens to complicate congressio­nal negotiatio­ns over his sweeping new social-spending program.

The omission disappoint­s a group of Democratic lawmakers pushing to remove the $10,000 cap on state and local tax, or SALT, deductions that went to help pay for a slice of President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts. That’s a particular headache for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has to kick off shepherdin­g the White House’s plan through the razor-thin margins in her chamber.

The ceiling significan­tly affected taxpayers in hightax areas including New Jersey, New York and California. And with Biden’s $1.8 trillion “American Families Plan” funded in part by tax hikes on highincome households, the cap would be all the more painful, likely spurring lawmakers from affected districts to mount a months-long fight to expand the SALT write-off.

“I will be banging my fists onto the table to make New Jersey’s voice heard and do everything in my power to put SALT repeal on the books,” Rep. Bill Pascrell said in a statement Wednesday hours after the White House released its plan. “I expect certain elements of the proposal to shift as it moves through Congress.”

Pascrell is one of the more than 20 Democrats who have said they won’t support Biden’s infrastruc­ture and social-spending proposals without a restoratio­n of the SALT deduction. That’s more than enough to hold up passage in the House.

In the Senate, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is himself a lead sponsor on legislatio­n to revive the break. He’ll need to get all 50 of his caucus on board with the final draft of Biden’s plan, besides counting on a tie-breaking vote from Vice President Kamala Harris to move the legislatio­n.

Democrats who want to restore the write-off say that Trump included the limitation on SALT in his 2017 tax overhaul as a way to punish Democratic areas. They say the cap is unjust and harms middleclas­s households in their districts where the cost of living is high.

Republican­s, and some progressiv­e Democrats, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, point out that repealing the cap would largely help the wealthy. Data also show that many of the uppermiddl­e income households in the high-tax states weren’t able to claim the SALT deduction before the Trump tax change because of restrictio­ns on how many tax breaks a household could take.

Lawmakers have made multiple appeals to key administra­tion officials, such as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who has said that the SALT cap causes “disparate treatment” among taxpayers and that she would work with Congress to find a solution to address the issue — though she hasn’t endorsed any particular approach.

Marc Gerson, a former tax counsel for the Ways and Means Committee, said Congress is just at the beginning of a very long negotiatio­n, and the demands for a full repeal of the SALT cap are an opening bid.

Gerson said lawmakers may eventually accept something less than full repeal, like an increase in the cap or a temporary repeal that would exclude the very wealthy. “There’s a lot of ways to skin the cat,” he said.

 ?? YURI GRIPAS/ABACA PRESS ?? President Joe Biden’s tax proposal leaves in place a cap on state and local tax deductions.
YURI GRIPAS/ABACA PRESS President Joe Biden’s tax proposal leaves in place a cap on state and local tax deductions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States