heelinhell
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looking like a bill giving to the rich and ignoring the hoi polloi
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The bill right now is bare bones. It's only 28 pages, mostly extensions of low-hanging Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions that are expiring. Expect to see amendments early next week that include the real meat. I think this is a case of keeping the substantive and politically fraught stuff out of eyesight until the last minute. In other words, stay tuned.looking like a bill giving to the rich and ignoring the hoi polloi
That was my takeaway, as well. That said, it suggests to me that many of the amendments to be offered will go down in flames and there will be no "Big Beautiful Bill" going to the Senate.The bill right now is bare bones. It's only 28 pages, mostly extensions of low-hanging Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions that are expiring. Expect to see amendments early next week that include the real meat. I think this is a case of keeping the substantive and politically fraught stuff out of eyesight until the last minute. In other words, stay tuned.
I think that is probably a safe bet. The margins are so narrow, the bill will regress toward the easiest version of itself, and I think you're right that that will look a lot like the 2017 TCJA extended.That was my takeaway, as well. That said, it suggests to me that many of the amendments to be offered will go down in flames and there will be no "Big Beautiful Bill" going to the Senate.
I'm guessing the Big Beautiful Bill coming out of the House will be little different from the 2017 tax bill that lined the pockets of the well to do and did nothing of substance to benefit working and middle class families.
That is one reason among many why the Treasury Secretary is urging Congress to raise the debt ceiling...I wonder if they realize a $500 increase in the child tax credit will add close to 30 Billion annually? Or that the increases in the standard deduction would add roughly another 30 Billion? Should be fun how the math works out for them.