Royal Oak Tribune

Dems tackling flash points of taxes, health, climate

Party working through pivotal difference­s

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON » Revamp the tax code and important federal health care and environmen­t programs. Spend $3.5 trillion over 10 years, but maybe a lot less. Ensure that no more than three Democrats in all of Congress vote “no” because Republican­s will be unanimousl­y opposed.

Try to finish within the next couple of weeks. And oh yes: Failure means President Joe Biden’s own party will have repudiated him on the cornerston­e of his domestic agenda.

That’s what congressio­nal Democrats face as they try writing a final version of a massive bill bolstering the social safety net and strengthen­ing efforts to tame climate change. Here’s a guide to some pivotal difference­s they must resolve:

Price tag

The White House and top Democrats compromise­d on a $3.5 trillion, 10-year cost for the bill. That’s a huge sum, though a fraction of the $61 trillion in federal spending already slated over that period.

Moderates led by Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona have said $3.5 trillion is too expensive, and votes from every Democrat in the 50-50 Sen

ate are mandatory for success. Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., have recently acknowledg­ed what seems inevitable: The final cost may have to drop.

Manchin has suggested limiting the total to $1 trillion to $1.5 trillion, which progressiv­es reject as paltry. Led by Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., they initially said at least $6 trillion was needed for serious efforts to help families and curb global warming.

Eventually a compromise will be reached, with some expecting it in the $2 trillion to $2.5 trillion range. But since House committees just finished crafting a $3.5 trillion version of the package, a smaller price tag means some priorities would have to be trimmed.

Taxes

To pay for much of the bill, the House Ways and Means Committee approved $2.1 trillion in tax boosts, mostly on the rich and corporatio­ns. Some details and numbers seem likely to change.

Biden, who’s promised to not increase taxes on people earning under $400,000, will probably get his proposal to raise the top individual income tax rate on the richest Americans to 39.6%. That would be up from 37% approved under former President Donald Trump.

But Democrats also want to raise other levies on the wealthiest. It’s unclear which proposals will survive and in what form.

Democrats want to provide tax credits for children, health care and child care costs and low-income workers. If the bill’s size shrinks, Democrats might save money by delaying, gradually phasing in or out or limiting some of those breaks. Some moderates say a proposed tax credit for buying electric vehicles shouldn’t go to higherearn­ing people.

Biden wants to raise the 21% corporate tax rate to 28% but may have to settle for around 25%. Democrats face other difference­s over taxes on corporate foreign income and stock buybacks.

Medicare

Three moderate Democrats blocked a House committee from approving a top priority for Biden and progressiv­es: saving hundreds of billions by letting Medicare negotiate lower prices for pharmaceut­icals it buys. Another committee approved the language, so it’s not dead.

Still, the plan is opposed by drug manufactur­ers and some moderates want to water it down.

Democrats planned to use the savings to pay for another progressiv­e goal: new dental, vision and hearing Medicare coverage. If the drug-pricing language is diluted and produces less savings, it’s unclear how the Medicare expansion would be financed.

Salt and IRS

In a town that loves acronyms, SALT, shorthand for state and local taxes, is on the table. Democrats from high-tax coastal communitie­s are demanding an increase in the current $10,000 limit on deductions taxpayers can claim for state and local taxes they pay.

With Pelosi unable to afford losing more than three Democratic votes, many think that deduction ceiling will be increased. To make up for the lost revenue, the IRS could be given extra money or banks might be required to report more financial transactio­n informatio­n to the IRS, ideas aimed at bolstering tax collection­s.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., meets with reporters to discuss President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda including passing a bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill and pushing through a Democrats-only expansion of the social safety net, the at the Capitol in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., meets with reporters to discuss President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda including passing a bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill and pushing through a Democrats-only expansion of the social safety net, the at the Capitol in Washington.

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