Republicans exploring tax options and timing

 

The incoming administration and congressional Republicans have begun publicly hashing out possibilities for major tax legislation in 2025, but plans remain in flux as they explore various options.

 

Republican leadership is pressing for an aggressive timeline of action within the first 100 days. House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith, R-Mo., said in a Fox Business interview that they “are ready at the Ways and Means Committee on day one to pass a tax bill.”

 

That kind of timeline may be overly ambitious for such a complex and significant legislative effort. Many lawmakers, particularly on the Senate side, are calling for a more deliberative approach. Key tax writer Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., recently said: “We’ve got a year. I’d rather take that year. The clock is ticking on this, but we don’t have to hop on this in the first few months.”

 

Some Republicans have also floated the idea of two separate reconciliation bills, allowing them to act quickly on pressing issues with broad consensus and then follow it with a more deliberative package.

 

“We’ll have two bites at the reconciliation apple in the next calendar year,” House Budget Chair Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, said recently. “And so, we’ll have plenty of opportunity to re-ignite growth through pro-growth policies and include fiscal reforms.”

 

That kind of process can also be very difficult politically, with lawmakers jockeying to have their pet provisions move on the first package.

 

Cost to the federal government will be a major negotiating point. Senate Finance Committee Chair Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, continues to forcefully advocate for the position that extensions of currently policy do not need to be offset.

 

“(Former president) Barack Obama, when he faced this same question—when (former) President (George) Bush’s tax cuts were expiring — did the same thing I’m proposing,” Crapo said during a television appearance. “That is to say, if you’re just extending current law, we’re not raising taxes or lowering taxes, that that is a $4 trillion deficit. That's ridiculous,” the incoming Finance Committee chair added before saying he was making the case to change the way the Congressional Budget Office scores extending tax cuts, "very aggressively" to fellow Republicans.

  

The debate over the so-called policy baseline is important, because it could allow Republicans to add more provisions into a bill via the budgetary maneuvering needed to advance tax legislation along party lines in the Senate, a process used for the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Crapo would need to convince not only 49 of his fellow senators, since the Trump White House will likely agree with his stance, but also House Republicans, who have at least signaled more fiscal hawkishness in recent months, and were more concerned about revenue neutrality by offsetting tax cuts and reform in 2017.

 

Republicans can also address the cost issues with savings or revenue from outside the tax code, cutting federal spending or crediting themselves with revenue raised by tariffs if President-elect Donald Trump moves forward on the large-scale import duties that he’s promised. But Republicans remain mixed on using tariffs as a revenue source.

 

“Building a budget around tariff revenue is a little shaky,” said Rep. Adrian Smith, R-Neb., who chairs the Ways and Means Committee subcommittee on trade. “That makes me a little bit nervous.”

 

“I can see where tariffs are used strategically in certain areas to discipline the bad actors, but I like to have as few as possible,” Johnson said.

 

Republicans continue to grapple with how many of the president’s campaign tax promises they can deliver on. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., recently said they would “try” to make the elimination of tax on tips happen, but conceded, “you’ve got to do the math.”

 

Smith, the House Ways and Means chair, also acknowledged the challenges of Trump’s tax cut promises added to renewing an already lengthy list of expiring policies. 

 

“The president campaigned on numerous different tax provisions, such as the no tax on tips, tax on Social Security, overtime incentives for manufacturing in the United States. So, there’s a whole list of things, so we’re looking at everything when we’re moving forward on this economic package,” Smith said.

 

The outlook for tax legislation will continue to evolve. For more information, see our full analysis.

 
 

Contacts:

 
 
 
Content disclaimer

This content provides information and comments on current issues and developments from Grant Thornton Advisors LLC and Grant Thornton LLP. It is not a comprehensive analysis of the subject matter covered. It is not, and should not be construed as, accounting, legal, tax, or professional advice provided by Grant Thornton Advisors LLC and Grant Thornton LLP. All relevant facts and circumstances, including the pertinent authoritative literature, need to be considered to arrive at conclusions that comply with matters addressed in this content.

For additional information on topics covered in this content, contact a Grant Thornton professional.

Grant Thornton LLP and Grant Thornton Advisors LLC (and their respective subsidiary entities) practice as an alternative practice structure in accordance with the AICPA Code of Professional Conduct and applicable law, regulations and professional standards. Grant Thornton LLP is a licensed independent CPA firm that provides attest services to its clients, and Grant Thornton Advisors LLC and its subsidiary entities provide tax and business consulting services to their clients. Grant Thornton Advisors LLC and its subsidiary entities are not licensed CPA firms.

 

 

Tax professional standards statement

This content supports Grant Thornton Advisors LLC’s marketing of professional services and is not written tax advice directed at the particular facts and circumstances of any person. It is not, and should not be construed as, accounting, legal, tax, or professional advice provided by Grant Thornton Advisors LLC. If you are interested in the topics presented herein, we encourage you to contact a Grant Thornton Advisors LLC tax professional. Nothing herein shall be construed as imposing a limitation on any person from disclosing the tax treatment or tax structure of any matter addressed herein.

The information contained herein is general in nature and is based on authorities that are subject to change. It is not, and should not be construed as, accounting, legal, tax, or professional advice provided by Grant Thornton Advisors LLC. This material may not be applicable to, or suitable for, the reader’s specific circumstances or needs and may require consideration of tax and nontax factors not described herein. Contact a Grant Thornton Advisors LLC tax professional prior to taking any action based upon this information. Changes in tax laws or other factors could affect, on a prospective or retroactive basis, the information contained herein; Grant Thornton Advisors LLC assumes no obligation to inform the reader of any such changes. All references to “Section,” “Sec.,” or “§” refer to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

Grant Thornton Advisors LLC and its subsidiary entities are not licensed CPA firms.

 

Trending topics