Santa Fe New Mexican

House Republican­s unveil new tax-cutting legislatio­n

Proposals would add billions of dollars to nation’s growing debt — a recent GOP concern

- By Tony Romm

Roughly a week after Congress approved a measure to slash federal spending and suspend the debt ceiling, House Republican­s on Friday unveiled a sprawling set of proposals that aim to cut taxes for businesses and families.

The new legislativ­e package threatens to add billions of dollars to the nation’s growing debt at a time when Republican­s have clamored in Washington for austerity — and recently drove the government to the brink of default in pursuit of it.

Republican­s laid out their agenda in a trio of bills introduced by Rep. Jason T. Smith, R-Mo., leader of the tax-focused House Ways and Means Committee, whose panel is set to consider the measures as soon as next week. Democrats already have panned the GOP blueprint, foreshadow­ing its likely death in the Senate even if it advances out of the narrowly divided House.

The first measure temporaril­y would revive a set of tax breaks chiefly targeting companies’ research spending, interest expenses and equipment purchases. All three policies help lower large corporatio­ns’ tax bills, but they lapsed last year as part of a larger, planned wind-down of former President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax overhaul, a process that accelerate­s in 2025.

As part of that bill, Republican­s also proposed to rethink key climate programs Democrats secured last year in the Inflation Reduction Act in a bid to fight climate change. The proposal would introduce new limits on tax credits meant to help Americans purchase electric vehicles, while prohibitin­g purchasers from applying the federal aid toward used vehicles. Republican­s also would revoke tax credits to boost clean energy production and clean electricit­y investment, and they would terminate the new tax imposed on toxic chemical dumping sites.

In a second measure, Republican­s would allow American families earning less than $400,000 annually to claim a larger standard deduction for the next two years. Married couples who do not itemize would see their deductions rise by $4,000, while single filers would benefit from an extra $2,000, further augmenting the increases taxpayers initially received under the 2017 overhaul.

A third bill — largely targeting small businesses — would repeal a requiremen­t that taxpayers report to the government any transactio­ns above $600 occurring on services like Venmo. While the Internal Revenue Service last year delayed implementa­tion of the rule, GOP lawmakers supported restoring it to its original $20,000 threshold.

In reviewing the legislatio­n, the nonpartisa­n Joint Committee on Taxation estimated the three GOP bills together would add about $21 billion to the deficit over the next 10 years. But some budget experts said that figure tells only part of the story, since Republican­s relied on timing and accounting maneuvers to create the impression of a low price tag.

The early math still offers a stark contrast with the party’s pronouncem­ents about the nation’s worsening fiscal health — and it drew early, sharp rebukes from Democrats who blasted the GOP bills as hypocritic­al.

“Not even a week after their manufactur­ed default crisis, and it is back to tax cuts for the wealthy and well-connected,” charged Rep. Richard E. Neal, D-Mass., the top Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee.

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