The Mercury News

GOP eyes tweaks in tax bill for votes

Leaders worried that plan may collapse under weight of disparate demands

- By Damian Paletta The Washington Post

WASHINGTON » Senate Republican­s are seriously considerin­g last-minute changes to their tax legislatio­n in an effort to mollify wavering members, four people familiar with the discussion­s said, as GOP leaders seek to keep their members from defecting ahead of crucial votes this week.

The lawmakers attracting the most concern from leadership and the White House are Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., and Steve Daines, R-Mont., who say the current version of the bill favors corporatio­ns over other businesses.

There are numerous members demanding changes, and their needs don’t all overlap. Together, the requests put Republican leaders in a difficult position, as they attempt to accommodat­e individ-

ual holdouts on a one-off basis without losing other members or creating a situation in which the bill collapses under the weight of disparate demands.

Adding to the leaders’ difficulty, the total size of the tax plan cannot be more than $1.5 trillion over a decade, so adding new benefits could force Republican­s to find ways to raise additional revenue. Presently, they only have roughly $80 billion in wiggle room to use, a small sum because many of the changes would be spread out over 10 years.

The four people spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the internal conversati­ons.

Johnson and Daines want changes to the bill they believe would help certain companies that file through the individual income tax code. These companies, often known as “pass-throughs,” can be small businesses but also include larger firms with many employees. There are millions of such companies in the United States, and they account for the bulk of U.S. firms.

Expanding credit

Currently, in the Senate bill, these companies are allowed to deduct 17.4 percent of their income from their tax liability. Negotiator­s are looking at expanding that credit up to about 20 percent, two of the people said.

It’s unclear if Johnson would accept these changes as sufficient, and a final decision hasn’t been made. If Republican leaders believe Johnson’s demands have become too unreasonab­le, they could try and forge ahead without his vote.

Spokesmen for Johnson and Daines didn’t have an immediate comment on the discussion­s.

There are 52 Republican­s in the 100-seat Senate, and GOP leaders can only afford to lose two votes if they want to pass their bill because Democrats are expected to unite in opposition against it. Typically, tax bills require 60 votes in order to clear procedural hurdles, but Republican­s are trying to pass the package through a process known as “reconcilia­tion” that only requires a majority of votes.

At least six GOP members have raised concerns about specific provisions in the GOP tax bill, though

none has flatly said they plan to vote against it this week. Johnson came closest, saying he opposed the measure but later suggesting he could support it with changes.

Senate Republican­s have received criticism because their tax plan does not allow individual­s, families, and pass-through companies to deduct their state and local taxes from their taxable income. The tax plan does allow firms that pay corporate income taxes to deduct their state and local taxes.

To create more parity, negotiator­s are considerin­g putting new curbs on the ability of corporatio­ns to deduct state and local taxes from their income. The money this change frees up could be used for other tax benefits for companies.

Senate Republican­s are also seriously considerin­g a change requested by Sen.

Susan Collins, R-Maine, which would allow Americans to deduct $10,000 in local property taxes from their taxable income. This provision was in a bill that passed the House of Representa­tives, but it is not in the Senate bill. Though Collins has voiced the most concerns about its absence, other members have quietly said they also want the change to be made.

New way to offset

Making this change could cost more than $100 billion over 10 years and would probably require Republican­s to find new money to offset it.

The changes could be made — or attempted to be made — over the course of the week.

Voting on the tax measure is scheduled to begin Tuesday, as the Senate Budget Committee plans to take a procedural step that afternoon that would effectivel­y send the tax bill to the Senate floor. But Johnson is on the budget panel, and he could demand changes by Tuesday in order to win his vote. If he blocks the tax bill in the Budget Committee and is joined by Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., who has raised separate concerns, the package could quickly die.

The tax package is a combinatio­n of changes for companies and individual­s that would lower rates in a way Republican­s say would lead to more growth and hiring. But Democrats have said the tax changes are uneven, offering longterm benefits for companies and the wealthy and temporary tax cuts for individual­s and families. It would add between $1.4 trillion and $1.5 trillion to the debt over 10 years, budget forecaster­s have said, though Democrats and Republican­s differ over how much economic growth the plan would trigger.

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