Daily Camera (Boulder)

Bill gives Republican­s IRS cuts, but Democrats say they expect little impact

- By Fatima Hussein and Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON >> House Republican­s are seeking to make good on their campaign promise to rein in the IRS with cutbacks built into the debt ceiling and budget cuts package moving through Congress.

The bill rescinds $1.4 billion given to the federal tax collector in the Democrats’ health and energy package that was approved last year on party line votes.

The White House says the debt deal also includes a separate agreement to take $20 billion from the IRS over the next two years and divert those funds to other nondefense programs.

Democrats expended a lot of political capital to get the IRS more money last year. They faced an onslaught of campaign ads, many of them misleading, about the expected hiring of 87,000 “new agents” to target low- and middle-class Americans.

Now, Biden administra­tion officials are offering assurances that the spending cuts secured by Republican negotiator­s will have minimal impact on the agency’s operations over the next few years.

The agency is on course to still get nearly three-quarters of the $80 billion boost that Congress approved for it last year. And the agency has the flexibilit­y to spend some of that money sooner than planned, officials stressed.

“The IRS has the resources it needs in the near term to improve customer service and go after wealthy and corporate tax evaders,” Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo tweeted.

But for Republican­s looking to win support for the bill, the spending cuts for the IRS represent a critical selling point.

The first bill that House Republican­s passed this year would have rescinded most of the extra dollars Congress had approved for the IRS the year before. The bill has gone nowhere in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

As for the debt deal, “what this does is put the IRS at the forefront,” said Rep. Patrick Mchenry, R-N.C., one of the lead GOP negotiator­s.

“We have a down payment in this bill of $1.4 billion to rescind their enforcemen­t hiring this fiscal year,” Mchenry said. “In the appropriat­ions process, we’ll come back for more.”

In April, IRS leaders released details on how the agency would use the $80 billion infusion for improved operations, pledging to invest in new technology, hire more customer service representa­tives and expand its ability to audit high-wealth taxpayers.

The plan lays out the specifics of how the IRS would allocate the $80 billion through fiscal year 2031.

Now, with some of that money clawed back, there is a question about what programs may take a back seat. Treasury officials say their plan to develop an online free file tax return system, which is in its pilot developmen­t stage, for instance, will not be impacted by the cuts.

But some analysts are skeptical about the Biden administra­tion’s assurances. Steve Rosenthal, senior fellow at the Urban-brookings Tax Policy Center, said “the loss of the funds has to be a setback” for the agency.

“With less money and resources, everything will slow down. It just may take a while longer” to develop certain promised programs, he said. “I don’t know if this will come out of service, enforcemen­t, technology or otherwise.”

Rep. Richard Neal of Massachuse­tts, the top Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee, said he spoke with the Treasury about the impact of the debt limit bill’s IRS funding cuts: “I came away, if not happy, at least satisfied.”

He said the potential for a default was a far greater concern, so he understood why the White House agreed to the cuts.

“The fact that the money is going to be diverted to other initiative­s is not my first choice, but I think to get this over the goal line, in terms of the contrast of an internatio­nal calamity, that has to be done,” he said.

Neal said he believes the IRS won’t be greatly harmed as a result of the cuts, adding, “That’s what I’ve been assured.”

The Congressio­nal Budget Office has projected that the $1.4 billion rescission will actually increase deficits by about $900 million over the next decade because it will lead to less tax revenue coming in. “CBO anticipate­s that rescinding those funds would result in fewer enforcemen­t actions over the next decade and in a reduction in revenue collection­s,” states the May 30 report to Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif.

The CBO’S projection­s did not include the $20 billion that the White House agreed to divert to other programs.

Rep. Brendan Boyle, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, said former President Donald Trump’s own appointed IRS commission­er repeatedly brought up to Congress the dramatic staffing shortages the agency was experienci­ng.

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