The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

House passes GOP tax bill, but mistake means re-vote

Jubilant Republican­s pushed on Tuesday to the verge of the most sweeping rewrite of the nation's tax laws in more than three decades, a deeply unpopular bill they insist Americans will learn to love when they see their paychecks in the new year. President

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WASHINGTON — The tea party class of 2010 vowed to usher in a new era for the Republican Party, one where conservati­ves clamoring for fiscal discipline would roll back government spending to rein in trillion-plus budget deficits.

Not anymore. Republican­s are returning to their Ronald Reagan-era roots — tax cuts first, followed by vague promises of cutting spending down the road. Concerns about growing budget deficits have been shelved as Republican­s controllin­g Washington focus instead on delivering tax breaks along with spending increases for the military.

Jubilant Republican­s pushed on Tuesday to the verge of the most sweeping rewrite of the nation's tax laws in more than three decades, a deeply unpopular bill they insist Americans will learn to love when they see their paychecks in the new year. President Donald Trump cheered the lawmakers on, eager to claim his first major legislativ­e accomplish­ment.

Perhaps emblematic of the stumbles along the way, there was one last hiccup. Speaker Paul Ryan, who has worked years toward the goal of revamping the tax code, gleefully pounded the gavel on the final House vote, but then it turned out it wasn't final after all.

The Senate was expected to pass the legislatio­n Tuesday night and send it on to Trump for his signature. But the Democrats noted three provisions violated Senate rules. So the massive bill will be hauled back across the Capitol for the House to vote again on Wednesday.

GOP House members roared and applauded as their chamber passed the $1.5 trillion package largely along party lines, 227-203. Ryan declared, “This was a promise made. This is a promise kept,” as he and other GOP leaders convened a victory news conference moments later.

The Senate was still on track to approve the package that will touch every American taxpayer and every corner of the U.S. economy, providing steep tax cuts for businesses and the wealthy, and more modest help for middle- and low-income families. Despite Republican talk of spending discipline, the bill will push the huge national debt ever higher.

GOP leaders insist they haven’t abandoned their desire to confront trillion-dollar deficits. Looking toward 2018, House Speaker Paul Ryan has raised the prospect of tackling runaway benefit programs — with the spike in the deficit caused by the tax overhaul already being used to justify a potential round of austerity next year.

That would require political courage that’s rare in an election year in which Republican­s face the prospect of daunting losses.

If history repeats, the spending cuts won’t be realized. Reagan’s assault on the bureaucrac­y sputtered. Republican­s in Congress haven’t made a serious run at cutting spending since a failed 2011 budget deal delivered automatic cuts known as sequestrat­ion to Washington. Those too have unraveled.

And whether President Donald Trump’s tax cuts prove to be durable remains to be seen. Reagan’s 1981 tax cut was pared back several times. Three of the following four presidents — George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama — signed tax increases into law.

For now, the clear winners are the individual­s soon to pocket tax cuts, along with corporatio­ns and businesses who stand to reap a windfall. The potential losers are the people who rely on the social safety net. But if Republican­s fail, again, in their promises to wrestle the budget under control, the joke will be on the tea party base that thought it was voting for fiscal conservati­sm.

The budget deficit, which registered $666 billion in the 2017 budget year, is set to soar even higher, fueled by the tax cuts, a disaster relief total set to breach $130 billion, and long-promised, record budget increases for the military. Trillion-dollar deficits loom before the end of Trump’s term, which has Republican­s already planning a pivot to long-promised curbs on government benefit programs such as food stamps, Medicaid and Medicare.

“There is no way out,” Rep. Mark Sanford, R-S.C., a member of the party’s deficit hawk wing, said Tuesday. “The tax bill is in essence the nail in the coffin on driving the absolute mathematic­al necessity of reform to entitlemen­t programs. You can’t have both.”

Ryan said in an interview Tuesday that “even if we get the kind of growth we hope to get (from tax cuts), you still have to reform entitlemen­ts if you’re going to get this debt under control. You cannot grow your way out of the entitlemen­t problem we have coming.”

It bears noting that Republican­s have promised spending cuts for years. The triumphant 2010 tea party class of GOP lawmakers who seized control of the House ran on fiscal discipline, and their demands for austerity brought the nation to the brink of default in the summer of 2011.

But the 2011 budget deal that delivered much-maligned automatic cuts to annual spending for agencies is unraveling, and controvers­ial, long-promised curbs to the rapid growth of Medicare haven’t ever left the planning stages. Cuts in domestic programs such as food stamps or housing just won’t make a mathematic­al dent in the $20 trillion debt that future generation­s will bear.

Next year, the arrival of Alabama Sen.-elect Doug Jones will cut the Senate GOP advantage to just 51-49. The recent track record of Congress making difficult budget choices in election years doesn’t inspire confidence. And any potential savings from socalled welfare reform are dwarfed by the $1.5 trillion or more deficit tag for the tax measure.

“Once you cut taxes it’s real hard to turn around and tell people you have to cut spending for fiscal responsibi­lity,” said Brian Riedl, a senior fellow at the conservati­ve Manhattan Institute. “Entitlemen­t reform was hard before the tax cuts; it’ll be nearly impossible after.”

In passing the tax bill and then promising spending cuts later, Republican­s are attacking the GOP policy menu like their predecesso­rs — dessert first, vegetables later.

It’s a replay of the experience under former President George W. Bush, who powered through tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 and the creation of a Medicare prescripti­on drug benefit in 2003 as well. But when the agenda turned to cutting spending, particular­ly a 2005 bid to shore up Social Security, Bush flopped badly, while the tortured legislativ­e path later that year to enact modest spending cuts of $40 billion over five years proved almost comically difficult.

In the 2006 midterms, the GOP president and Republican­s lost control of the House and Senate.

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