November 27th, 2022
I recently cosponsored H.R. 8913, important legislation to make permanent the tax cuts for individuals and small businesses originally enacted by President Trump as part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. Without Congressional action, 23 different provisions of the 2017 Republican tax law are set to expire after 2025. With Americans continuing to suffer under the weight of record-high Bidenflation and an uncertain economic future, we need to provide some much-needed relief and certainty to hardworking families and ensure these tax cuts do not expire.
H.R.8913 — 117th Congress (2021-2022) Introduced in House (09/20/2022)
TCJA Permanency Act
This bill makes permanent provisions affecting individual and business taxpayers that were enacted in 2017 by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and are scheduled to expire at the end of 2025.
The bill makes permanent reductions in individual and capital gain tax rates.
The bill increases the standard tax deduction for individual taxpayers. It also increases and modifies the child tax credit and raises the contribution base for the tax deduction for charitable contributions.
The bill allows additional contributions to ABLE accounts (tax-exempt accounts designed to enable individuals with disabilities to save and pay for disability-related expenses). It exempts from taxation combat zone benefits of members of the Armed Forces serving in the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt and limits the deduction for moving expenses to active duty members of the Armed Forces.
Additionally, the bill
expands the types of elementary and secondary school expenses eligible for payment from qualified tuition programs (529 programs);
lowers to $750,000 the amount of mortgage debt eligible for an interest expense tax deduction;
reinstates after 2023 the exclusion of income from the gross income of student loan borrowers for loan debt discharged due to death or total and permanent disability;
makes permanent the limitation on the tax deduction for state and local taxes and denies a deduction for foreign real property taxes;
makes permanent the tax deduction of the income of certain pass-through business entities;
repeals the tax deduction for personal tax exemptions and the exclusion of employer-provided bicycle commuter fringe benefits;
terminates certain miscellaneous itemized tax deductions;
doubles the estate and gift tax exemption amount; and
makes permanent the increase of the alternative minimum tax exemption amount for individual taxpayers. back...
H.R.8913 — 117th Congress (2021-2022) Introduced in House (09/20/2022)
TCJA Permanency Act
This bill makes permanent provisions affecting individual and business taxpayers that were enacted in 2017 by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and are scheduled to expire at the end of 2025.
The bill makes permanent reductions in individual and capital gain tax rates.
The bill increases the standard tax deduction for individual taxpayers. It also increases and modifies the child tax credit and raises the contribution base for the tax deduction for charitable contributions.
The bill allows additional contributions to ABLE accounts (tax-exempt accounts designed to enable individuals with disabilities to save and pay for disability-related expenses). It exempts from taxation combat zone benefits of members of the Armed Forces serving in the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt and limits the deduction for moving expenses to active duty members of the Armed Forces.
Additionally, the bill
expands the types of elementary and secondary school expenses eligible for payment from qualified tuition programs (529 programs);
lowers to $750,000 the amount of mortgage debt eligible for an interest expense tax deduction;
reinstates after 2023 the exclusion of income from the gross income of student loan borrowers for loan debt discharged due to death or total and permanent disability;
makes permanent the limitation on the tax deduction for state and local taxes and denies a deduction for foreign real property taxes;
makes permanent the tax deduction of the income of certain pass-through business entities;
repeals the tax deduction for personal tax exemptions and the exclusion of employer-provided bicycle commuter fringe benefits;
terminates certain miscellaneous itemized tax deductions;
doubles the estate and gift tax exemption amount; and
makes permanent the increase of the alternative minimum tax exemption amount for individual taxpayers. back...