How Republicans made
millions on the tax cuts they pushed through
Congress
The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is a case
study of how lawmakers make themselves
richer with the bills they pass.
By Peter Cary / Center for Public
Integrity
January 24, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
As part of the bill, Republicans approved
tax breaks in 2017 for seven classes of
assets many of the wealthier members of
Congress held at the time, including
partnerships, small corporations, real
estate, and several esoteric investment
vehicles. While they sold the bill as a
package of business and middle-class tax
cuts that would not help the wealthy,
the cuts likely saved members of
Congress hundreds of thousands of dollars in
taxes collectively, while the corporate tax
cut hiked the value of their holdings.
“It feels to me like a
kleptocracy,” said Jeff Hauser, director of
the Revolving Door Project at the Center for
Economic and Policy Research, a left-leaning
think tank in Washington, DC.
Such congressional
self-enrichment has been thrust into the
2020 presidential campaign. Democratic
candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren has said her
first priority as president would be to pass
an anti-corruption package that, among other
things, would forbid
members of Congress from owning
individual stocks, bonds, and other
securities so they could not benefit from
tax or financial laws they passed.
“Under current law, members
of Congress can trade stocks and then use
their powerful positions to increase the
value of those stocks and pad their own
pockets,” Warren wrote in a September
Medium post.
Republicans
own lots of stock
Two years after the passage
of the Trump tax act, its effects — some
obvious, some hidden — are coming into
focus. One is its cost: Contrary to
Republican claims, the law is not paying for
itself and is likely to burden the nation
with an additional
$1.9 trillion in debt over 11 years
beginning in 2018, according to the
Congressional Budget Office.
And while the law cut tax
rates for people of all income brackets,
some of its tax benefits overtly favored the
wealthy, such as the 2.6 percentage point
tax rate cut in the highest bracket and the
doubling of the estate tax exemption to
$11.2 million. Other provisions were subtler
yet favored the wealthy even more: tax
breaks for their investments, for instance,
or changes that boosted the value of their
stocks. Among the rich beneficiaries are
members of Congress, more than half of whom
were found to be millionaires in 2014.
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