Quantcast
Thursday, November 21, 2024

House GOP Kicks Off Majority w/ Vote to Slash Extra IRS Funding

'This is meant to nickel-and-dime, audit and harass America's small businesses and families, who they know cannot afford the legal fees to fight this army...'

(Headline USA) House Republicans began their tenure in the majority Monday by passing a bill that would rescind nearly $71 billion that Congress had provided the IRS, fulfilling a campaign promise even though the legislation is unlikely to advance further.

Democrats hope to use extra tax collection to offset spending in last year’s so-called Inflation Reduction Act, which invested heavily in green-energy boondoggles and partisan pork projects—and to replenish an agency already hobbled with bureaucratic backlogs by nearly doubling its administrative workforce.

The money is on top of what Congress provides the IRS annually through the appropriations process and immediately drew alarm following reports that it would establish an army fully armed IRS agents to harass hard-working Americans.

Already, some indications signal that the federal agency plans to meddle in things such as minor online transactions that relied on banking apps like PayPal and Venmo, potentially creating confusion, headaches and higher tax bills for millions of middle-class taxpayers.

The bill to rescind the money passed the House on a party-line vote of 221-210. The Democrat-controlled Senate has vowed to ignore it.

Shortly before the vote, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projected that rescinding the extra IRS funding would increase deficits over the coming decade by more than $114 billion.

That created an awkward moment for Republicans, who have been saying that addressing deficits would be one of their top concerns in the majority—albeit by cutting wasteful spending alongside the Biden administration’s excess taxation.

Still, the CBO’s projection didn’t appear to dampen Republican support. Rep. Jeff Duncan, R-S.C., said the extra IRS funding Democrats provided last year was for one purpose: “to go after small businesses, hard-working Americans, to try to raise money for reckless spending—reckless spending that has caused $31 trillion in debt in this nation.”

Treasury Department plans to hire an estimated 87,000 new IRS employees over the next decade if it gets the money. But it insists that those employees will not all be auditors and that many will be replacing some 50,000 employees who are expected to quit or retire in coming years.

“This debate about IRS lends itself to be the most dishonest, demagogic rhetoric that I have seen in the Congress at any point in time,” claimed Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., who recently lost his post as House majority leader following the election.

Charles Rettig, the former commissioner of the IRS, said in a final message to the agency in November that the additional money would help in many areas, not just beefing up tax enforcement. He claimed the investments would make it “even less likely for honest taxpayers to hear from the IRS or receive an audit letter.”

Additional funding for the agency has been politically controversial since 2013, when the IRS under the Obama administration was found to have used inappropriate criteria to review tea party groups and other organizations applying for tax-exempt status.

In the ensuing years, the IRS was mostly on the losing end of congressional funding fights, even as a subsequent 2017 report found that both conservative and liberal groups were chosen for scrutiny.

In April, Rettig told lawmakers the agency’s budget has decreased by more than 15% over the past decade when accounting for inflation and said the number of full-time employees—79,000 in the last fiscal year—was close to 1974 levels.

But Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., and other Republicans weren’t buying the argument that the funding would be focused on auditing the wealthy.

“This is meant to nickel-and-dime, audit and harass America’s small businesses and families, who they know cannot afford the legal fees to fight this army,” Malliotakis said.

Sen. Ron Wyden, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said a decade of Republican-led budget cuts gutted the IRS.

“The only way that House Republicans could make it any more obvious that they’re doing a favor for wealthy tax cheats is by coming out and saying it in exactly those words,” Wyden said. “This bill is going nowhere in the Senate.”

And the White House said President Joe Biden would veto the bill if it gets to his desk, saying that the wealthiest 1% of Americans hide about 20% of their income so they don’t have to pay taxes on it, shifting more of the tax burden to the middle class.

“With their first economic legislation of the new Congress, House Republicans are making clear that their top economic priority is to allow the rich and multibillion-dollar corporations to skip out on their taxes, while making life harder for ordinary, middle-class families that pay the taxes they owe,” the White House said.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

Copyright 2024. No part of this site may be reproduced in whole or in part in any manner other than RSS without the permission of the copyright owner. Distribution via RSS is subject to our RSS Terms of Service and is strictly enforced. To inquire about licensing our content, use the contact form at https://headlineusa.com/advertising.
- Advertisement -

TRENDING NOW

TRENDING NOW