Republicans float new tax breaks for tips, local taxes in Trump budget package

House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Los Angeles, at the White House on April 2. Republicans in Congress proposed new tax breaks.

House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Los Angeles, at the White House on April 2. Republicans in Congress proposed new tax breaks. (Leah Millis, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Republicans propose tax breaks for tipped income, tuition and local taxes in Congress.
  • The plan makes President Donald Trump's tax cuts permanent, offset by Medicaid restrictions and spending cuts.
  • The U.S. House aims to pass the bill by May 26. The debt ceiling deadline is mid-July.

WASHINGTON — Republicans in the U.S. Congress proposed new tax breaks for tipped income, overtime pay, private school tuition, seniors, and state and local taxes on Monday as they fleshed out a sweeping budget package that would also cut taxes and tighten healthcare benefits for the poor.

The draft legislation introduced by the tax-writing committee in the House of Representatives incorporated many of President Donald Trump's campaign promises, though it would not raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans, as he had suggested last week.

The package would also make permanent tax cuts from Trump's first White House term that are due to expire this year and add trillions of dollars to the U.S. debt.

That lost revenue would be partially offset by new restrictions on the Medicaid health plan, which covers 71 million low-income people, and other spending cuts that would total $912 billion over the coming decade.

The U.S. federal government currently carries more than $36 trillion in debt and Republicans — who hold narrow majorities in the House and Senate — are wrestling with how to extend the tax cuts without adding too much to the quickly growing debt pile.

A precise estimate of the cost of the new bill was not immediately available, though it would likely be more costly than a previous version that was estimated to cost $4.9 trillion by a congressional committee.

The new tax breaks included in the latest version would further reduce revenues and contribute to yawning budget gaps.

Tax deductions

House Speaker Mike Johnson has said that he wants his chamber to pass the bill before the U.S. Memorial Day holiday on May 26. Lawmakers face a harder deadline of mid-July, as Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has urged lawmakers to raise the government's debt ceiling by that point to avoid a default that would upend global markets.

The bill would allow taxpayers to deduct up to $30,000 for the state and local taxes they pay, up from the $10,000 limit now. That is a crucial issue for moderate Republicans from high-tax coastal states, though they may not be satisfied by the higher figure.

It would allow up to $5 billion annually to be donated tax-free to scholarship funds for private and religious schools, which would make it easier for families to opt out of the public school system.

It also would exempt some tipped income, overtime pay from taxes, as well as interest payments on loans for domestically produced automobiles.

It would create an additional $4,000 deduction for seniors, and set up new trust funds for children called "MAGA accounts" that would allow families to save up to $5,000 per year tax-free for college tuition, home payments or other costs.

The tax plan would increase deductions for families with children, some multinational corporations and unincorporated businesses.

Tightening Medicaid

A separate outline released on Sunday aims to save hundreds of millions of dollars on Medicaid, in part by tightening eligibility and requiring recipients to work.

That stops short of the more dramatic cuts advocated by the party's right flank, but would still kick millions of people off the program, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

Those cuts are not likely to satisfy fiscal hawks, who are pushing for deeper spending reductions, and could also upset moderates who represent low-income areas where Medicaid is especially important.

Trump has repeatedly vowed not to cut Medicaid benefits, though it is unclear whether he would approve these proposed changes.

The plan also would cut green-energy subsidies created by Democratic former President Joe Biden's 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.

Republicans will have to resolve their differences to pass the budget package out of the House, which they control by a narrow 220-213 margin, and the Senate, which they control 53-47.

Contributing: Susan Heavey, Richard Cowan and Jeff Mason

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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