Detroit Free Press

Dems release draft of tax plan; SALT talks continue

Schumer eyes challenge of reaching a deal by Christmas

- Laura Davison

WASHINGTON – The Senate Finance Committee released an unfinished version of President Joe Biden’s tax plan as Democrats race to meet a year-end deadline to pass a roughly $2 trillion tax and spending bill.

The panel’s portion of the legislatio­n released Saturday contains key elements of the bill, including an extension of the child-tax credit, roughly $1.5 trillion of tax increases on wealthy Americans and corporatio­ns and a drug price-reduction plan. The measure didn’t include the Senate’s plan to expand the state and local tax (SALT) deduction, despite weeks of negotiatio­ns.

The legislatio­n includes technical changes from the House version, as well as some policy changes, according to a statement from Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden.

The draft is merely a placeholde­r version as Democrats squabble over key elements of the plan. The legislativ­e text was released to give the parliament­arian a copy of the bill to review to make sure it complies with the chamber’s rules for advancing a fast-track reconcilia­tion bill that can pass the 50-50 Senate with Democratic votes alone.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said he wants to pass the bill by Christmas, a challengin­g timetable because the bill contains a number of unresolved policy issues, as well as several procedural hurdles.

“A number of my colleagues said they didn’t agree with what was passed by the House,” Wyden said Thursday. “So discussion­s are continuing.”

Senate Democrats say they want to make the SALT deduction more generous, but only for those making less than $1 million. The House-passed version of Biden’s Build Back Better bill included a measure to raise the cap on the write-off to $80,000 from $10,000.

Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, and Bob Menendez, D-New Jersey, who have been leading the SALT negotiatio­ns, say the House approach is too generous. They are instead looking at limiting the tax break to those under a certain income threshold, but have yet to agree on what that should be.

Sanders wants a lower income level (about $400,000) while Menendez is pushing for couples making just under $1million to be able to claim the full break.

“We are making progress,” Menendez said Thursday, while declining to give specifics on the talks.

Democrats are also discussing tweaking the 15% corporate minimum levy on financial profits, also known as a minimum “book” tax. Lawmakers have raised concerns that the levy would diminish the value of other tax preference­s, including credits for renewable energy investment and breaks for contributi­ng to pension funds for workers.

The draft did make some changes to the House bill, including eliminatin­g a tax on vaping products.

Wyden said he is continuing to talk to other Senate Democrats about the merits of a billionair­e’s income tax, a levy on unrealized gains of the richest Americans.

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