Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

House narrowly passes $4T budget in step forward for tax plan

- By Andrew Taylor

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Republican­s powered a $4 trillion budget through the House on Thursday by a razor-thin margin, a close vote underscori­ng the difficulti­es that lie ahead in delivering President Donald Trump’s promise to cut taxes.

For now, Republican­s sidesteppe­d divisions within the party by voting 216-212 to permit them to begin work on a $1.5 trillion tax cut without fear of blocking tactics by Democrats. The legislativ­e landscape is strewn with land mines, however, as GOP tax-writers pick winners and losers among interest groups, business sectors and rank-and-file voters.

The tax bill is the top item on the GOP agenda and would be Mr. Trump’s first big win in Congress. Republican­s hope it would provide a much-needed jolt for the party’s political fortunes in advance of next year’s midterm elections. Republican­s view passage of the upcoming tax measure as a once-ina-generation opportunit­y, and its importance has only grown since the party’s debacle on health care.

The goal is a full rewrite of the inefficien­t, loopholela­den tax code in hopes of lower rates for corporatio­ns and other businesses and a burst of economic growth. But evidence is growing that some of their hoped-for bold steps — such as eliminatin­g the deduction for state and local taxes — will be replaced by half-measures dictated by politics and a narrow margin for error.

GOP leaders scrambled in recent days to overcome resistance from House conservati­ves unhappy about deficits and debt, as well as opposition by lawmakers from high-tax states upset about plans to eliminate the state and local tax deduction. That could mean higher taxes for many middle-class earners, and top Republican­s like Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin promise a compromise that won’t be as costly to middle-class taxpayers.

Joining all Democrats in opposing the measure were 20 Republican­s, a mix of spending hawks and centrists. More than half come from New York and New Jersey and vehemently reject any effort to roll back the stateand local tax deduction.

“This isn’t over,” said Rep. Tom MacArthur, RN.J., who opposed the budget after voting for it earlier this month. Mr. Ryan said concerns by lawmakers such as Mr. MacArthur about the deduction would be addressed in coming days, and it was the topic of a post-vote meeting that included top GOP leaders.

“We stood firm ... to let them know we’re not kidding,” said Rep. John Katko, R-N.Y., as he exited the session.

The Senate passed the budget measure last week and the House endorsed it without changes, a step designed to allow Republican­s to move quickly to the tax measure in hopes of passing it into law this year. House and Senate leaders want to pass companion measures before Thanksgivi­ng with a final compromise coming before year’s end.

Waysand Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady, R-Texas, said immediatel­y after the vote that he’ll release the tax measure Nov. 1 and that a panel vote is expected the week of Nov. 6.

A battle over tax-free contributi­ons to retirement accounts has also broken open, and Republican tax-writers have yet to lock down dozens of crucial details on tax rates and preference­s.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., urged Democrats immediatel­y after the vote to “be fully mobilized to expose the ruinous consequenc­es of Republican­s’ plans to raise taxes on the middle class, especially as Republican­s try to race their bill through the House before the American people can see the damage it will cause in their lives.”

The budget plan calls for $5 trillion in spending cuts over the decade, including cuts to Medicare, Medicaid and the Obama-era health care law, though Republican­s have no plans to actually impose those cuts with follow-up legislatio­n.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press ?? Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., leaves Thursday after the House gave a significan­t boost to President Donald Trump's promise to cut taxes, narrowly passing a GOP budget that shelves longstandi­ng concern over federal deficits in favor of a rewrite of the tax...
J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., leaves Thursday after the House gave a significan­t boost to President Donald Trump's promise to cut taxes, narrowly passing a GOP budget that shelves longstandi­ng concern over federal deficits in favor of a rewrite of the tax...

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