If you make $30,000 or less, you’ll be paying way higher taxes by 2021
Senate Republicans are currently pushing a tax reform bill that, if passed, would cut taxes for the wealthy and increase taxes for middle- and lower-class families. According to The Washington Post, families with an income of $30,000 or less per year will see higher taxes by 2021 if this tax reform is passed.
On Thursday, November 16th, House Republicans passed their version of the tax reform bill with 227 votes in favor and 205 against. The Senate’s version passed through the Senate Finance Committee Thursday night and now awaits clearance from the full Senate. The Republicans backing the bill and President Trump are banking on the reform bill to be passed by the end of the year.
A statement released by the White House claims, "This legislation cuts taxes for middle-income families and empowers American businesses to create more jobs, increase wages, and propel our economy toward a brighter future."
The Senate bill would drop the corporate tax rate from 35% to 20% and would temporarily change individual tax rates and deductions. It would also abolish the Obamacare rule, which states that Americans must buy health insurance or pay a penalty.
But the Joint Committee on Taxation, Congress’s nonpartisan team of analysts, released a report showing that tax increases would hit lower/middle people within the next five years, whereas individuals making more than $100,000 per year would continue to pay less as times goes on.
https://twitter.com/udfredirect/status/931140781909446656
Senator Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah), heading authorship of the GOP tax bill, doesn’t believe the Joint Committee on Taxation’s findings to be accurate.
BREAKING: Senate Finance Committee advances tax overhaul package, another step closer to delivering middle-class tax relief. #taxreform pic.twitter.com/RuFVdMpp3X
— Senate Finance Committee (@SenFinance) November 17, 2017
"Anyone who says we’re hiking taxes on low-income families is misstating the facts," he stated, according to The Washington Post. "Obviously we have no intention of raising taxes on those families. Every Republican on this committee has been committed to providing tax cuts for every income cohort."
Did you see this → The House PASSED the Tax Cuts & Jobs Act! Yesterday’s vote is a major step in turning the page on 31 long years of hardworking Americans struggling to find good-paying jobs, make ends meet, & providing for their families. #1182MOREhttps://t.co/zNTG4r3VAy
— House Republicans (@HouseGOP) November 17, 2017
Now’s the time to call your senators and ask them to vote against the GOP’s tax reform bill. The Senate will vote when they return from Thanksgiving break, so act now and let your voice be heard.