The Denver Post

GOP tax plan in trouble; senator won’t support it

Wis. Republican says it benefits corporatio­ns at expense of other businesses

- By Damian Paletta and Mike DeBonis

WASHINGTON» The Republican effort to overhaul the tax code suffered serious setbacks Wednesday after a conservati­ve senator unexpected­ly said he opposed the Senate plan and a GOP moderate raised major concerns about it. The announceme­nts cast doubt whether Republican­s would be able to quickly pass what would be their first significan­t legislativ­e achievemen­t under President Donald Trump.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said he opposed the Senate and House versions of the tax legislatio­n because they benefited corporatio­ns at the expense of other, typically smaller companies. Earlier in the day, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said Republican­s had erred when they changed their tax bill this week to include a repeal of the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate, which requires every American to have health insurance or pay a fine.

“This bill is a mixture of some very good provisions and some provisions I consider to be big mistakes,” said Collins, one of three Republican­s who joined with Democrats this summer to vote down a Senate effort to scrap much of the health-care law.

Without Johnson and Collins, Republican­s would need every other member of their caucus to vote for the plan — far from a guaranteed outcome. And neither senator’s concern can be easily addressed without changes that could drive other Republican­s to oppose the bill.

Adding additional tax breaks for smaller businesses could appease Johnson, but it could force the GOP to raise taxes elsewhere. Leaving the Affordable Care Act alone could make the measure more attractive to Collins and other moderates. But it would run against the wishes of many conservati­ves and Trump and create other challenges in making the bill comply with Senate rules allowing passage with fewer than 60 votes.

The opposition to the $1.5 trillion tax-cut bill threatened what had been growing mo-

mentum for the tax overhaul. The House is expected to pass its own tax overhaul Thursday. And the Senate Finance Committee hopes to do the same this week, with the full Senate voting after Thanksgivi­ng.

Senate leaders made lastminute changes to their bill Tuesday to solve several problems, including that it would run afoul of Senate rules known as “reconcilia­tion” that allow legislatio­n to pass with only a simple majority if it doesn’t raise the deficit after a decade.

Changes made Tuesday included removing the individual mandate, which would save the government $300 billion over the next decade as it paid out less in insurance subsidies for low- and middle-income Americans, according to the nonpartisa­n Congres- sional Budget Office. The change would also, according to the CBO, result in 13 million more Americans going without coverage.

Senate leaders also changed their bill to make tax cuts for corporatio­ns permanent, but let individual tax cuts sunset at the end of 2025.

The expiration also would affect small businesses whose owners use tax law to pay some of their income at the individual rate, a change Johnson said would unfairly penalize small businesses.

Allowing those tax deductions to expire would increase taxes these companies pay by around $45 billion per year in 2026 and 2027, according to a forecast put out by the Joint Committee on Taxation. House Republican­s’ version of the tax legislatio­n contains more generous, and permanent, tax cuts for these businesses, but Johnson said neither was sufficient in its current form.

“These businesses truly are the engines of innovation and job creation throughout our economy, and they should not be left behind,” Johnson said in a statement. “Unfortunat­ely, neither the House nor Senate bill provide fair treatment, so I do not support either in their current versions.”

The companies Johnson is referring to are often small businesses, but they can be companies such as hedge funds, law firms, real estate companies and other large companies.

President Trump called the Wisconsin Republican on Wednesday evening to discuss the concerns. It was not immediatel­y clear whether Trump assuaged any of Johnson’s complaints, but the senator said earlier Wednesday that he held out hope of voting for the bill if it was fixed.

Several other critical Senate Republican­s who might have reservatio­ns about the bill have not said how they will vote. They include Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., who has previously expressed concern about the tax bill’s potential impact on the deficit and said he would not support a bill whose provisions had an expiration date. Corker said Wednesday he was still reviewing the bill.

Another potential holdout, Sen. John McCain, RAriz., repeatedly declined to say whether he would vote for a tax bill that includes the proposed change to the Affordable Care Act. McCain, who voted against a previous attempt to repeal the ACA, said he wanted to review the tax bill as a whole.

The GOP unrest comes as Senate Democrats exploded over the late-night changes that Republican­s made to the bill, saying the new GOP plans would further punish the middle class.

“Why do people think this is a swamp?” Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said. “This is Swamp 101.”

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, meeting with lawmakers, said the bill would make business cuts permanent because companies needed long-term assurances of their tax rates for planning purposes.

The House, meanwhile, cruised toward passage of its own version of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which differs significan­tly from the Senate version.

The House legislatio­n does not touch the ACA, and only a small portion of the individual tax code would phase out. The bill, however, appears to violate Senate budget rules because it would add to the deficit after a decade. If different House and Senate bills pass, they will have to be reconciled in a way that ultimately complies with Senate rules.

Still, House Republican­s seemed largely ready to pass the bill and notch a legislativ­e win.

As of Wednesday evening, fewer than a dozen GOP members had come out against the bill.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, typically one of the chamber’s most collegial members, bristled at attacks from Democrats. At a committee hearing to debate the changes, Hatch laced into Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., saying Democrats were trying to bankrupt Medicare and alleged that Democrats were trying to commandeer the committee.

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