“我仍然说不”:关于削减战略武器条约的斗争阻碍了“伟大而美丽的法案”的通过,特朗普要求取得进展
'I'm Still A No': Battle Over SALT Holding Up 'Big, Beautiful Bill' As Trump Demands Progress

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/im-still-no-battle-over-salt-holding-big-beautiful-bill-trump-demands-progress

共和党正在努力通过特朗普总统的“宏伟法案”,主要原因是对州和地方税(SALT)减免存在分歧。SALT减免允许纳税人在列举扣除项目时,从其联邦收入中扣除州和地方税,这主要使高税收州的富裕人士受益。 有多个提案建议提高目前的1万美元SALT上限,但“SALT核心小组”要求大幅提高上限后才会支持该法案。特朗普总统敦促共和党优先通过该法案,稍后再处理SALT问题,甚至建议对年收入低于40万美元的人士设置3万美元的上限。他还警告不要削减医疗补助。 尽管特朗普进行了干预,“SALT核心小组”和“众议院自由核心小组”的成员仍然不相信,这使人们对该法案的前景产生了怀疑。SALT减免的争议在未来十年可能耗资约1万亿美元,这是共和党团结一致和法案通过的主要障碍。


原文

While Republicans hash out the details on the path to passing President Trump's 1,116-page 'Big, Beautiful Bill' - a key sticking point has emerged in regards to the state and local tax (SALT) deduction, which allows taxpayers who itemize to deduct state and local taxes (such as income and property taxes) from their federal taxable income. This primarily benefits rich taxpayers in high-tax states such as California, New York and New Jersey.

Tax writers on the House Ways and Means Committee have offered to raise the cap from its current $10,000 to $30,000 for joint filers making up to $400,000 per year - while Speaker Mike Johnson's most recent offer was a $40,000 cap for indivuduals / $80,000 for couples for four years at a $751,600 income limit.

The 'SALT Caucus,' meanwhile, are holding out for at least a $62,000 cap for individual filers, and $120,000 for couples before they'll vote 'yes' on the bill.

"I’m still a no on the Jason Smith number," said SALT Caucus member Rep. Nick LaLota (R-NY), referring to the $30,000 cap floated by House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith (R-MO). "I hope that the president’s presence here today motivates everybody, especially my leadership, to give the SALT Caucus a number to which we could actually say yes."

The SALT cap is worth thousands of dollars in savings to millions of typically higher-income taxpayers who itemize vs. take the standard deduction. The cost to the rest of America for this would be around $1 trillion over the next decade, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation.

Before 2017, the average SALT deduction was approximately $13,000, before it was capped at $10,000. In 2022, nearly 10% of all taxpayers used a SALT deduction.

Trump Drops F-Bomb

During a Tuesday meeting with House Republicans, President Donald Trump pressured Republicans to fall in line behind the bill and get it done - asking moderate Republicans from blue states to give up their SALT battle, while warning members not to "fuck with Medicaid," which some lawmakers have eyed for cuts.

"It’s not a question of holdouts. We have a tremendously unified party," Trump told reporters before the meeting. "There are some people who want a couple of things that maybe I don’t like or that they’re not going to get."

A White House official said Trump made clear in the meeting that he’s losing patience with all holdout factions of the conference, including the SALT Caucus and the House Freedom Caucus, and he insisted every Republican should vote “yes.”

His main requests to the conference were not to let SALT impede the bill, arguing Republicans can fight for SALT later on; not to touch Medicaid except for eliminating waste, fraud and abuse such as booting off those who entered the country illegally and instituting commonsense work requirements; and to stick together and get the bill done, a White House official told The Hill.

The president told lawmakers in the closed-door meeting to “let SALT go,” arguing concerns over the provision can’t get in the way of passing the bill. He signaled he was supportive of raising the SALT deduction from $10,000 to $30,000 for anyone making $400,000 or less — the proposal currently in the bill that members of the SALT Caucus have vocally rejected. -The Hill

Trump's appearance at the nearly two-hour meeting didn't move the needle much, however.

"The president I don’t think convinced enough people that the bill is adequate the way it is," said Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD), chair of the House Freedom Caucus, whose members are among the loudest critics of the massive spending package. "I can’t support it the way it is right now," Harris added.

Meanwhile, Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY), a prominent SALT Caucus member, said "While I respect the president, I’m not budging on it."

So, it all comes down to SALT.

Loading...

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com