Trump, White House and tax
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New York Post |
It’s unclear how receptive congressional Republicans and wealthy GOP megadonors would be to such a proposal.
The New York Times |
A study by the Yale Budget Lab, a nonpartisan research center, forecast that tariffs would cause vehicle prices to increase by an average of 13.5 percent — an additional $6,400 to the price of an ave...
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The fiscal framework set for a possible vote this week puts off key decisions, inviting conflict with the House.
U.S. congressional Republicans are struggling over how to pay for President Donald Trump's multi-trillion-dollar tax-cut and immigration reform agenda, with the fate of the Medicaid healthcare program and the nation's debt ceiling hanging in the balance.
A House GOP aide told The Post that the “target cuts” for both chambers of Congress will be reconciled — with at least $1.5 trillion or more in the total reduction to government
Both the Senate and House passed new tax cut plans on Tuesday. During the debate with Democrats, federal spending cuts and future economic uncertainty took center stage.
Republicans want to pretend their tax cuts are free. A new report says otherwise. Republicans have a trifecta, which means they’re trying to pass more expensive tax cuts that will disproportionately go to the rich.
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Raw Story on MSN'How Exactly?' Fox News Host Grills Peter Navarro After He Says 'Tariffs Are Tax Cuts'Fox News host Shannon Bream challenged White House trade adviser Peter Navarro after he insisted that President Donald Trump's tariffs were "tax cuts."
5don MSN
House and Senate leadership both said on Monday that further negotiations over an already-passed income tax elimination will happen.
While officials stressed that the estimates were subject to change, the snapshot suggests how agencies are meeting Trump’s mandate to shrink government.
At its current rate of borrowing, the country’s debt as a share of the economy will reach 118% in 2035, the Congressional Budget Office said on Thursday.
Senate Republican leadership wants to essentially use the “current policy baseline” to project the tax cuts as not adding to the deficit beyond the 10-year budget window, instead considering them merely an extension of the status quo. This is a budget gimmick that the Senate parliamentarian will have to rule on to allow them to use.