The National - News

Trump’s historic tax overhaul secures enough votes to pass

-

Republican­s working to execute their first major legislativ­e achievemen­t of Donald Trump’s presidency appear to have secured the votes to pass a huge tax overhaul that Mr Trump hoped to present to the American people for Christmas.

“This is happening. Tax reform under Republican control of Washington is happening,” the House speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin said. “Most critics out there didn’t think it could happen. And now we’re on the doorstep of something truly historic.”

It is the widest-ranging reshaping of the tax code in three decades and is expected to add to the nation’s US$20 trillion debt.

The tax cuts are projected to add $1.46tn over a decade. The Republican­s plan to muscle it through Congress next week before its year-end break.

Under the bill, the current 35 per cent rate on corporatio­ns would fall to 21 per cent, the crown jewel of the measure for many Republican­s. Mr Trump and Republican leaders had set 20 per cent as their goal but added a point to free money for other tax cuts that won over wavering policymake­rs in final talks.

The legislatio­n would lower taxes on the richest Americans. Benefits for most other taxpayers would be smaller.

The bill would repeal an important part of the former US president Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act – the requiremen­t that all Americans have health insurance or face a penalty – as the GOP, as the Republican party is commonly referred to, looks to unravel a law it failed to repeal and replace this past summer.

Only at the weekend did Republican­s cement the needed support for the overhaul, securing endorsemen­ts from wavering senators.

Marco Rubio of Florida relented in his high-profile opposition after negotiator­s expanded the tax credit that parents can claim for their children. He said he would vote for the measure this week.

Mr Rubio had been holding out for a bigger child credit for low-income families. After he got it, he tweeted that the change was “a solid step toward broader reforms which are both pro-growth and pro-worker”.

Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, the only Republican to vote against the senate version earlier this month, made the surprise announceme­nt that he would back the legislatio­n.

Mr Corker, the chairman of the senate foreign relations committee, has repeatedly warned that the nation’s

I realise this is a bet on our country’s enterprisi­ng spirit, and that is a bet I am willing to make BOB CORKER Senator from Tennessee

growing debt is the most serious threat to national security.

“I realise this is a bet on our country’s enterprisi­ng spirit, and that is a bet I am willing to make,” Mr Corker said.

The bill embodies a long-standing Republican philosophy that a substantia­l tax break for businesses will trigger economic growth and job creation for Americans in a trickle-down economy.

Sceptical Democrats are likely to oppose the legislatio­n unanimousl­y.

The bill would drop the present 39.6 per cent top rate on individual­s to 37 per cent. The $1,000-per-child tax deduction would grow to $2,000, with up to $1,400 available in IRS refunds for families who owe little or no taxes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates