Los Angeles Times

Now the hard work begins on tax bill

The ambitious plan is viewed as a chance to salvage a failing GOP legislativ­e agenda.

- By Lisa Mascaro lisa.mascaro@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s produced an ambitious proposal to overhaul the tax code, but as lawmakers sift through the pages, sorting out winners and losers, any concerns they might have are being overpowere­d by the political momentum to deliver on one of President Trump’s top priorities.

The legislatio­n is on a fast track to pass in the House in a matter of weeks, despite criticism that it’s heavily tilted toward corporatio­ns and the wealthy, does little for the middle class and will pile $1.5 trillion onto the deficit.

Instead, Republican­s see in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act an opportunit­y to salvage their legislativ­e agenda, after limited accomplish­ments during Trump’s first year in the White House, and reshape the federal tax code to align with their low-tax, small-government goals.

“I’ve been around a lot of meetings over the years, and I have not been as encouraged as I am right now,” said Rep. Peter Roskam (R-Ill.), a member of the Ways and Means Committee, which drafted the bill. He is appealing to voters back home to look at the entire package, rather than just the loss of mortgage interest and other popular deductions, and is counseling colleagues to embrace debt rather than bemoan the red ink they railed against during President Obama’s term.

“You have a once-in-ageneratio­n opportunit­y to do something that’s transforma­tional, and we’re going to take advantage of it,” he said.

The legislatio­n is the most sweeping overhaul of the tax code in 30 years, pushing down both corporate and some individual tax rates, while doing away with many itemized write-offs used by Americans to lower their tax bills in favor of a bigger lump-sum standard deduction.

It also enshrines conservati­ve social priorities in the tax code — encouragin­g college savings accounts for unborn children during pregnancy, limiting gambling deductions and repealing taxfree bond financing of sports stadiums.

But the centerpiec­e of the bill — and the priority for Republican­s — is the new 20% corporate rate, down from 35%, which would be the lowest since 1939 and a windfall that, coupled with other business changes, would deprive the government of nearly $1 trillion in revenue.

Trump and his allies in Congress are counting on the lower tax rate to spur economic growth, arguing that the result will be higher paychecks as the benefits roll down to workers.

“In the words of Donald Trump, I think it’s going to be huge,” said Rep. Ted Yoho (R-Fla.), who said he was inclined to support the bill. “I experience­d the ’80s .... I feel the ’80s, the trickle down, worked pretty well.”

Many outside analysts, though, would have preferred a more gradual corporate rate reduction and worry that middle-class households may not benefit as much.

“We are already running substantia­l deficits and the tax cuts would add significan­tly to fiscal shortfalls over the next decade,” wrote William Gale, co-director of the nonpartisa­n Tax Policy Center, in an analysis Friday.

Taxpayers would no longer be able to take many popular write-offs — for student loan interest, medical expenses or job-related costs such as the classroom supplies many teachers often buy. The $4,050 personal exemption would also be repealed and, most crucially for high-tax states like California, the bill eliminates the deduction for state and local income and sales taxes.

Instead, the standard deduction would almost double to $12,000 for individual­s and $24,000 for couples. Those with children could claim a bigger child tax credit, which rises from $1,000 to $1,600. An additional $300 credit would be available for non-child-related family needs, like caring for an elderly parent. But, unlike the corporate tax cuts, which would be permanent, the family credit would expire after five years.

The outcome may be a wash for many families, experts say. Republican­s, in rolling out the plan, promised households would see average annual tax savings of $1,182 — a fraction of the benefit that is expected to flow to corporatio­ns and the wealthy.

“It’s really making suckers of the American people,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco). “They’re trying to pass this as a middle-class tax cut when they know it’s not.”

Undoubtedl­y the biggest fight ahead is over mortgage interest, which has brought an onslaught of criticism from the National Assn. of Realtors and the National Assn. of Home Builders, and is causing the most discomfort for lawmakers from high-cost regions such as New York, California and vacation communitie­s.

The bill would cap the mortgage interest deduction to loans of no more than $500,000, rather than the current $1 million, and end the deduction entirely on second homes. Such provisions have been considered for years by both parties, but largely in broader debates about strategies for affordable housing or paying down debt — not to fund tax breaks.

Northeaste­rn state lawmakers, who successful­ly fought earlier efforts to include repeal of the property tax deduction that is so important to residents in New York and New Jersey, are now turning their attention to mortgage interest.

Rep. Tom MacArthur (RN.J.) wants to raise the mortgage deduction beyond the bill’s $500,000 loan limit and retain it for second homes.

California’s Republican­s have been less involved in those discussion­s as they largely stick with Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (RBakersfie­ld) and party leaders leaning toward supporting the bill.

Opposition, though, is mounting as outside groups begin to pressure lawmakers on a range of specific provisions that do not always fall along partisan lines.

For example, groups aligned with the conservati­ve Koch brothers balked over a 10% surcharge on some overseas corporate operations, even though they backed off harsher initial criticism of the bill.

“We’re now in the opening ceremonies of the lobbyist Olympics,” Roskam said.

Trump appears to be playing a more substantiv­e role than during the GOP’s failed effort earlier this year to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

Rep. Kevin Brady (RTexas), chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said he had been in constant contact with the president, who was on the phone this week as Republican­s made final tweaks to the bill before rolling it out.

“The whole purpose on this was to not do what we did in healthcare,” Brady said at a forum Friday.

House Republican­s passed their Obamacare repeal bill earlier this year, only to see the president — after initially celebratin­g it — later deride it as “mean.” A revised measure, and others, later stalled in the Senate.

“Because we’ve not delivered on our promise on healthcare repeal, it’s critical we deliver on our promise on tax reform,” Brady said. “We achieve this, or near to it, we have delivered on our promise, in a big way.”

 ?? Jim Lo Scalzo European Pressphoto Agency ?? SPEAKER Paul D. Ryan, backed by House Republican colleagues, discusses the GOP tax plan on Capitol Hill.
Jim Lo Scalzo European Pressphoto Agency SPEAKER Paul D. Ryan, backed by House Republican colleagues, discusses the GOP tax plan on Capitol Hill.

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