Khaleej Times

Ivanka lobbies hard for tax overhaul

- Catherine Lucey

washington — Ivanka Trump successful­ly pushed to get a familyfocu­sed tax credit included in the Republican tax overhaul proposal. She’s got no time for a victory lap, though: Now comes the biggest political challenge of her time in Washington.

The White House adviser and first daughter is lobbying on Capitol Hill to make sure an expansion of the current $1,000 child tax credit stays in the tax plan and that it’s big enough to matter. Then there’s the added hurdle of getting the overall tax plan over the finish line — anything but a sure bet.

Ivanka has been wooing lawmakers and conservati­ve advocacy groups behind closed doors and is expected to make her case in public as well, as part of a coordinate­d White House push for the tax overhaul. All this as she tries to steer clear of the West Wing histrionic­s involving her father that have threatened to engulf her at times. She’s studiously sticking to her policy agenda, promoting issues such as Stem education and workforce developmen­t, while trying to tune out the noise.

“A significan­t expansion of the child tax credit will help parents have more money at a time in their lives when they need it the most and give them the flexibilit­y to make the best choices regarding their families’ care,” Trump said in a statement to AP.

A significan­t expansion of the child tax credit will help parents have more money at a time in their lives when they need it the most Ivanka Trump, White House adviser and first daughter

Trump stepped away from her executive roles at The Trump Organisati­on and running her own fashion brand to join the administra­tion, alongside husband Jared Kushner. She has won some praise for advocating for issues not often high on the Republican agenda, but has also faced criticism from liberals who expected her to do more to temper her father’s conservati­ve agenda.

A White House official who was not authorised to publicly discuss internal thinking said Ivanka has welcomed the more discipline­d West Wing structure put in place by chief of staff John Kelly, believing a more orderly decision-making process allows her to focus on her priorities. Still, some negative headlines have continued, including reports that Kushner used his personal e-mail account on dozens of occasions to communicat­e with colleagues in the White House.

Protective of his children, President Donald Trump has expressed concern over criticism of his family, according to the White House official. In public, though, he’s bragged about his daughter’s accomplish­ments, calling her up on stage during a tax speech in North Dakota recently, asking her to address the crowd and calling her “baby” and “honey.”

Ivanka told US Weekly that she tries to ignore the critics. “If I engaged too deeply, I wouldn’t be able to prioritise the things I came here to do,” she said.

As the tax negotiatio­ns get underway, Ivanka is stepping up her activity on Capitol Hill.

She met last week with Rep. Cathy McMorris Rogers, R-Wash., and spoke with Rep. Kristi Noem, R-S.D., and Sen. Marco Rubio, RFla., who has worked with her on the proposal, said the White House official. Her past meetings have included Sen. Lamar Alexander, RTenn., and Sen. Orrin Hatch, RUtah, as well as Republican­s and Democrats on the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.

She also spoke last month with conservati­ve activists gathered at the headquarte­rs of the group Americans for Tax Reform. The group’s president, Grover Norquist, said she was “very well received. Spoke without notes. She understood what was going on.”

Trump and Kushner have also been quietly hosting dinners for lawmakers at their home in Washington’s Kalorama neighbourh­ood in coordinati­on with White House legislativ­e officials. A person familiar with the events confirmed the bipartisan dinners, which have focused on a variety of topics.

Some key details of the tax overhaul remain unsettled. The tax blueprint does not specify what the child tax credit should increase to, nor has Trump offered a number. But she’s made clear she wants the credit to be refundable, so people can still get money back even if they don’t owe taxes. Rubio and Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, want to increase the tax credit to $2,000, but Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, who heads the House Ways and Means Committee, wouldn’t commit to doubling it.

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 ?? — AP ?? Ivanka has been wooing lawmakers and conservati­ve advocacy groups behind closed doors.
— AP Ivanka has been wooing lawmakers and conservati­ve advocacy groups behind closed doors.

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