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Thursday,
October 25, 2001
House
narrowly passes tax relief legislation
By
Curt Anderson
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
The Republican-led House narrowly passed tax relief
legislation Wednesday that would provide a $100 billion jolt
to the staggering economy.
Democrats
protested it would mainly help big companies, but President
Bush urged quick Senate action on the bill.
Part
of the war we fight is to make sure our economy continues
to grow, Bush said during an appearance at a Maryland
printing plant shortly before the House vote.
The close
216-214 vote, largely along party lines, came after hours
of noisy debate reflecting the deep political divide on economic
policy, a departure from the unity on some other matters on
Capitol Hill since the Sept. 11 terror attacks. Seven Republicans
voted against the bill; three Democrats voted for it.
It
officially shatters the myth of bipartisanship, said
Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y.
Undeterred, Republicans said the legislation was the ideal
way to encourage renewed business investment, stop job layoffs
and boost consumer confidence in time for the holiday shopping
season.
Investment
is the driving engine in the economy, said House Majority
Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas. This bill provides a reward
for the risk-takers who create jobs in America.
Democrats
sharply disagreed, accusing Republicans of assembling a package
that favors the wealthy and big corporations over laid-off
workers and threatens to trigger deep future budget deficits.
Senate Democrats are certain to make major changes, most likely
giving greater aid to the unemployed and fewer business tax
cuts.
The
workers who have lost their jobs get bread crumbs from this
bill, said House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo.
Bush praised
four main elements in the House bill, which costs $99.5 billion
in 2002 and $159 billion over 10 years. They include a new
round of tax rebates for people who didn't get a check earlier
this year; repeal of the corporate alternative minimum tax;
enhanced expensing write-offs for business capital assets;
and acceleration of the cut in the 27 percent individual income
tax rate so it falls to 25 percent in 2002, four years earlier
than under current law.
Other
key items in the bill would effectively cut long-term capital
gains tax rates from 20 percent to 18 percent for most taxpayers,
give major corporations refunds of alternative minimum taxes
they paid up to 15 years ago and allow companies to deduct
current operating losses from taxes they paid up to five years
earlier.
House
Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Thomas, R-Calif., said
tax breaks for business would oil the machines that
create jobs .... They're not the enemy of working families.
They're the source of hundreds of millions of paychecks.''
But Rep.
Corinne Brown, D-Fla., succinctly summarized the Democrats
dim view of the corporate tax cuts: Why does the big
dog always get to eat first?
Even though
there is still considerable bipartisan support for some of
the tax items, Democrats said the measure's $12 billion in
grants to states was far too little to tackle the growing
unemployment problem.
They proposed
an alternative that would have added 26 weeks of unemployment
benefits and provided a 75 percent federal match for COBRA
health insurance available to laid-off workers, but it was
defeated on a 261-166 vote.
Bush echoed
House Republicans in repeating that the $60 billion in spending
already approved by Congress for recovery and war efforts
was enough. I strongly believe its time to balance
this amount of spending with additional tax relief,
the president said.
Even
so, the president dispatched Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill
to Capitol Hill to continue negotiating Wednesday with Senate
Republicans and Democrats on a compromise package.
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