The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump signs, lauds $1.5T tax overhaul

President heads to Florida for holidays to celebrate win.

- By Laurie Kellman and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed the $1.5 trillion tax overhaul into law Friday, using his last moments in the White House before flying to Florida for the holidays to celebrate a much-needed political win.

He also signed a temporary spending bill to keep the government running and provide money to upgrade the nation’s missile defenses. The tax cut, which fulfilled a long-held Republican goal, was at the forefront of Trump’s mind.

Starting next year, the new law will give big cuts to corporatio­n and wealthy Americans and more modest reductions to other families. Trump continued to pitch it as a win a for the middle class, insisting that even though polling indicates the tax cut is unpopular, “the numbers will speak” for themselves.

“I don’t think we are going to have to do much selling,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

The tax cut is the largest since 1986, but far from the biggest in American history, as the president repeatedly claims. It also is projected to add to the nation’s debt, something that was anathema to Republican­s for years.

Passage of the tax bill marked a

signifific­ant victory for a president hungry for one after chaos and legislativ­e failures during his fifirst year in offiffice — including an efffffffff­fffort to repeal former President Barack Obama’s health care law — despite Republican control of Congress. Trump also ended the yearwith his sights still trained on the way the media treat him, tweeting that themainstr­eam media “NEVER talk about our accomplish­ments in the end of year reviews.”

“We are compiling a long @ beautiful list,” he tweeted.

Trump said that he originally planned to sign the tax bill early next year but moved it up on the spur of the moment after watching mediacover­age Fridaymorn­ing about the legislatio­n. After fifinishin­g the bill signings, hewasoffff­toMar-a-Lago in Florida, his plane leaving Joint Base Andrews inMaryland just before noon EST.

The fifirst major overhaul of the nation’s tax laws since 1986 could add $1.5 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, according to the Congressio­nal Budget Offiffice. Republican leaders have said they’re willing to take that step in pursuit of a boost to the economy. But some in theGOPworr­y their party could face a political backlash without an aggressive public relations tour.

Trump, meanwhile, continued to send mixed messagesab­outhisdesi­retowork across the aisle. In the Oval Offiffice, he contended anew that Democrats “don’t like tax cuts, they want to raise your taxes.”

But that came just hours after he tweeted a pitch for bipartisan­ship: “At some point, and for the good of the country, I predictwew­ill start workingwit­h the Democrats in a bipartisan fashion. Infrastruc­ture would be a perfect place to start. ... It is time to start rebuilding our country!”

SomeWhite House aides and Republican leaders are looking warily ahead at the midterm election year, when typically a president’s party loses seats inCongress. That’s all the more true for presidents whose approval ratings dip below 50 percent, andTrump’shavenever been that high.

Only about 1 in 3 voters have supported the legislatio­n in recent days, according to several polls. About half of Americans believe the plan will hurt their per- sonalfifin­ances. And2in3vot­ers say the wealthy will get the most benefifits, according to a USA Today/Suffffffff­ffffolk University poll released last week. Starting next year, families making between $ 50,000 and $75,000 will get average tax cuts of $890, according to an analysis by the nonpartisa­n Tax Policy Center. Families making between $100,000 and $200,000 would get average tax cuts of $2,260, while families making more than $1 million would get average tax cuts of nearly $70,000, according to the analysis.

But if the cuts for individual­s are allowed to expire, most Americans — those making less than $75,000 — would see tax increases in 2027, according to congressio­nal estimates. Only high-income people would get ameaningfu­l tax cut after 2025, when nearly all of the plan’s individual incometax provisions are due to expire. Republican­s argue that the middle class will see benefits from the business tax cuts, with more jobs and higher wages.

Democrats say that’s not likely to happen, that the tax cuts are simply a boon to wealthy Americans like Trump and leave lower-income families in a lurch.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A / GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump signs sweeping tax reform legislatio­n into law Friday in the Oval Office in Washington, D.C. Trump praised Republican leaders in Congress for all their work on the biggest tax overhaul in decades.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A / GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump signs sweeping tax reform legislatio­n into law Friday in the Oval Office in Washington, D.C. Trump praised Republican leaders in Congress for all their work on the biggest tax overhaul in decades.
 ?? CAROLYN KASTER / AP ?? President Donald Trump greets people on the tarmac Friday as he arrives in West Palm Beach, Fla. Before he left Washington, D.C., he signed the tax overhaul bill and the temporary spending plan.
CAROLYN KASTER / AP President Donald Trump greets people on the tarmac Friday as he arrives in West Palm Beach, Fla. Before he left Washington, D.C., he signed the tax overhaul bill and the temporary spending plan.

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