Los Angeles Times

Ads flood in as vote on tax reform nears

- By Christine Mai-Duc, Sarah D. Wire and Seema Mehta christine.maiduc@latimes.com sarah.wire@latimes.com seema.mehta@latimes.com

With a vote expected Thursday on the proposed Republican tax overhaul, California GOPs in the House are being targeted with a blitz of ads highlighti­ng changes that would hurt many California taxpayers.

In turn, GOP-connected groups have launched ads encouragin­g the lawmakers to back the plan.

Five of the state’s GOP members are being targeted in television ads that began airing over the weekend about the tax reform plan that would disproport­ionately affect residents of hightax states such as California.

“The Republican tax plan will raise taxes on California families by eliminatin­g middle-class tax deductions to pay for a massive tax break for the super-wealthy and big corporatio­ns,” a narrator says during the 30-second ad, which the Not One Penny coalition of liberal and labor groups funded. “Tell your member of Congress to vote ‘no’ on the Republican tax plan. California families can’t afford it.”

The ads are airing in districts represente­d by Darrell Issa of Vista, Steve Knight of Palmdale, Dana Rohrabache­r of Costa Mesa, Ed Royce of Fullerton and Mimi Walters of Irvine. Flipping at least some of those districts, which Hillary Clinton won over Donald Trump last year, is crucial to Democrats’ efforts to retake the House.

Republican House members from California are facing competing pressures — a desire to accomplish a major legislativ­e achievemen­t before the midterm elections, and a reluctance to support a bill that would eliminate and restrict tax breaks used heavily by their constituen­ts.

The House version of the tax proposal would eliminate the deduction for state and local income and sales taxes, limit the property tax deduction to $10,000 and cap the mortgage interest deduction on loans up to $500,000, rather than the current $1 million.

The Senate version preserves the current mortgage deduction but eliminates the property tax deduction.

Unlike their counterpar­ts in states such as New York and New Jersey, California Republican­s haven’t put up much of a fight against the tax bill and the possible eliminatio­n of the popular tax deductions. So far, only Issa has said he opposes the House version.

Red to Blue California, a political action committee seeking to unseat vulnerable California GOP lawmakers, began running digital ads Monday casting the tax plan as “billionair­e tax cuts” and urging voters to call their members of Congress to oppose the plan.

The group said the ads will reach about 250,000 people in each of the seven GOPheld districts where Clinton won last year.

Another PAC, Fight Back California, has been running digital ads over the last week, targeting about 30,000 voters in the districts and focusing on homeowners who would be affected by the changes to the mortgage interest deduction.

With pressure building through ads opposed to the plan, a super PAC connected with House Speaker Paul Ryan launched ads Monday encouragin­g the lawmakers to back the tax bill.

The $1.5 million in television and online ads from American Action Network targets 23 Republican­s in multiple high tax states, including five in California — Jeff Denham of Hanford, David Valadao of Turlock, Knight, Walters and Issa.

A similar ad by the pro-Trump PAC 45Committe­e urging four House Republican­s to “keep your promise and vote yes on tax reform” will air on cable and radio. These are among the first efforts by Republican­s to shore up tax plan support through ads in California.

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