The Palm Beach Post

Trump, GOP to meet on tax vote

At least six Senate members have yet to voice support.

- By Damian Paletta

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump will meet with Senate Republican­s on Tuesday ahead of crucial votes in the GOP effort to pass a massive tax cut package, as conservati­ves move even closer to notching a major legislativ­e victory.

The meeting will come during a weekly lunch Republican­s hold as they go over their agenda. There are 52 Republican­s in the 100-seat Senate, and the GOP needs a simple majority of votes to pass its version of the tax cut bill as soon as Thursday or Friday.

A number of Senate Republican­s have not expressed support for the bill, and several of them have chilly relationsh­ips with Trump. But Trump remains popular with the GOP base, and his support is seen as crucial in helping get the tax bill pushed into law.

The Senate tax bill would cut the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 20 percent beginning in 2019. It also would lower the tax rates individual­s and families pay until 2025. It would also, as currently designed, repeal the “individual mandate” provision of the Affordable Care Act requiring Americans to have health insurance or face a financial penalty.

The House of Representa­tives already has passed its version of a tax-cut package, and the House and Senate must pass identical versions of the bill before it can be signed into law. If the Senate passes its version of the tax cut bill next week, the House can either attempt to pass an identical version or go into a “conference” process where members of each chamber work together to try to reconcile difference­s.

There are a number of difference­s between the House and Senate bills. For example, the House bill does not call for changes to the Affordable Care Act, and it also allows Americans to deduct up to $10,000 in local property taxes from their federal taxable income.

But before the House and Senate can formally negotiate through their difference­s, Senate Republican­s must find a way to pass their bill.

A majority of Senate Republican­s are expected to back the measure, but at least six have stopped short of saying they will vote for the tax cut package. None is seen as intractabl­e, but Republican­s can only lose two votes or the bill will falter.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, voted against a GOP effort to repeal parts of the Affordable Care Act several months ago and has said she is still reviewing the tax plan, but she announced last week that she was in favor of repealing the individual mandate, which some saw as a sign she was preparing to declare support for the new GOP plan. She is being watched very closely because Trump’s personal attacks on Murkowski following her opposition to the health care vote only seemed to steel her resolve.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, has also expressed concerns about the GOP tax cut plan in part because of the changes to the Affordable Care Act, but has not said she would oppose it. She had a tax-focused event earlier this month in Maine with Ivanka Trump, but that was before Senate Republican leaders decided to include the health care language in the pending bill.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., vowed to oppose an earlier version of the Senate GOP tax bill because he felt there weren’t enough benefits for certain types of corporatio­ns, but he has recently signaled that there might be changes to the bill that would win him over.

Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., have raised concerns of their own with the bill, particular­ly over how it would add to the government’s debt. And Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who also opposed the earlier effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act, has also not said how he plans to vote.

The Senate GOP tax bill could face a crucial procedural vote as soon as Tuesday, when the Senate Budget Committee could vote on a measure that effectivel­y sends the tax cut bill to the Senate floor. Both Corker and Johnson are on that committee, and if they oppose the legislatio­n at that stage, that could effectivel­y stall the entire process. If they approve the bill at that stage, it would send the bill to the floor, where lawmakers would be able to add amendments.

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