The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Dems want Trump to push ahead on adjusting tax caps

- By Dan Freedman

WASHINGTON — Connecticu­t Democratic lawmakers on Thursday called on President Donald Trump and congressio­nal leaders to prioritize adjustment to the $10,000 cap on state and local taxes — SALT — after Trump said in an interview that he was “open to talking about” revisions to the 2017 GOP tax law.

"The number one concern I've heard over the past year about the GOP tax bill is the restrictio­n on SALT deductions, which disproport­ionately affects states like Connecticu­t, especially in Fairfield County,” said Rep. Jim Himes. “Fixing the SALT issue should absolutely be a priority.”

Connecticu­t is enmeshed in a lawsuit against the cap, claiming that its inclusion in the 2017 tax bill was unconstitu­tional and aimed at states like Connecticu­t with relatively high median incomes, high costs, high taxes — and Democratic governors.

In a White House interview Wednesday with reporters from regional outlets including Hearst Connecticu­t Media, Trump initially defended the SALT cap as a fair balancing of the tax burdens of low-tax, low-cost (and mostly Republican) states in the South and West, and those of states like Connecticu­t and New York.

Trump, a New York-based real estate tycoon before becoming president, put a political spin on his comments by saying the SALT cap equalizes the

burden of states that “that have been really well run and don’t have debt,” and “states that have been poorly run, like New York and others.”

The SALT cap “makes all states the same,” he said.

But he also acknowledg­ed he had been in touch with unnamed political figures and individual­s stressing what they saw as the unfairness of the added tax burden to homeowners and state taxpayers in Connecticu­t, New York and elsewhere.

“I’d be open to talking about it,” Trump said, adding that the impetus for change would have to come from the Democratic-controlled House.

Although he questioned whether the SALT cap affected middle-class homeowners in Northeast states or just the wealthy, Trump also said “it’s been severe on them.”

Some Connecticu­t lawmakers tut-tutted Trump for only now realizing the damage that the SALT cap is doing to middle class homeowners and state taxpayers.

“Even President Trump concedes that his riggedfor-the-rich tax law is hurting middle class families and homeowners in Connecticu­t,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro. ‘The most recent data shows that 40 percent of the residents in my district were able to make ends meet because of this provision, but the President and Republican­s in Congress were not concerned about them when they jammed through the tax bill.”

Sen. Chris Murphy, who like the rest of Connecticu­t’s congressio­nal delegation bitterly opposed the tax bill when it won Congressio­nal approval late in 2017, called the cap “a partisan trick aimed at hurting states like Connecticu­t.”

And now, “families are starting to feel it as they file their taxes this season."

Sen. Richard Blumenthal said he was “pretty underwhelm­ed by President Trump’s vague references to `talking about... changing’ the egregiousl­y harmful tax hit that he pushed through Congress.”

Had Trump “listened to the American people,” Blumenthal said, “he might have understood the devastatin­gly unfair impact of his cuts in the SALT deduction on middle class families in states like Connecticu­t.”

Even if President Trump ultimately decides to back changes to the cap on SALT, Democrats in Connecticu­t and elsewhere would face a major hurdle — the Republican-controlled Senate.

Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said through a spokesman that he would not consider any tweaks to the SALT deduction.

The cap now in place limits taxpayers to a combinatio­n of $10,000 worth of deductions on either property taxes, state income taxes or state sales taxes.

But a total of 41 percent of the federal tax returns filed in Connecticu­t in the past claimed an average SALT deduction of $19,665, nearly double the $10,000 limit, according to a Connecticu­t Office of Legislativ­e Research report. Connecticu­t ranked second among states in the percentage of filers claiming the deduction.

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