Agenda 47: Trump’s Tax Cut Plans

Kamala Harris has promised to raise taxes on the middle and working classes 1) by letting Trump’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) expire at the end of 2025, and 2) by taxing 25% of the increased value of your home since you bought it. No doubt she has many other ways to increase taxes. As a Marxist, her goal is to gain ever more power by stealing ever more money from those who earn it and making Americans ever poorer.

NOTE: Biden/Harris already increased “taxes” about 30% FOR EVERYONE by causing the fastest and highest inflation rate ever experienced by Americans. Inflation is a hidden tax because it makes each dollar worth less, similar to your employer taking money from your paycheck and giving it to the IRS.

Donald J. Trump has promised to wipe out taxes on tips, taxes on Social Security and taxes on overtime. This would be the biggest break for the working class since LBJ’s “Great Society” scam stole the earnings they needed to raise a family and eliminated one-income households for all but the upper income. Of course, Trump will need a GOP House and GOP Senate to accomplish this. Democrat politicians are way too greedy to give working and middle class earners a break.

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LET’S REVISIT TRUMP’S MASSIVE TAX CUTS

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), a major overhaul of the tax code, was signed into law by President Donald Trump on December 22, 2017 and became effective for tax year 2018. No Democrat in either the House or the Senate voted for the bill. Democrats have always been greedy. LBJ was able to double income taxes in 1968 only because Democrats owned the House & Senate.

The legislation included some of the biggest changes to the tax code in three decades (when Reagan, a Republican, lowered taxes in 1986). The reform impacted both taxpayers and business owners alike, particularly through tax cuts. Many of the tax reform benefits for individuals will expire at the end of 2025. The law also created a single flat corporate tax rate of 21%.

The law cut corporate tax rates permanently and individual tax rates temporarily. It permanently removed the individual mandate requiring individuals to purchase health insurance, a key provision of the Affordable Care Act.

How the TCJA Affected Individuals

  • Income Tax Rates: The law retained the seven individual income tax bracketsThe top rate fell from 39.6% to 37%, while the 33% bracket dropped to 32%, the 28% bracket to 24%, the 25% bracket to 22%, and the 15% bracket to 12%. The lowest bracket remained at 10%, and the 35% was unchanged.
  • Standard Deduction: TCJA significantly raised the standard deduction. For tax year 2024, the standard deduction for single filers is $14,600 and $29,200 for married couples filing jointly.
  • Personal Exemption: The law suspended the personal exemption, which was $4,150, through 2025. It was replaced with a much higher “standard deduction” which benefited lower income Americans, especially renters, and cost high earners more taxes because it removed the high amounts they had been claiming.
  • Health Coverage Mandate: TCJA ended the individual mandate, a provision of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) that levied tax penalties for individuals who did not obtain health insurance coverage.
  • Child Tax Credit: The law raised the child tax credit to $2,000 and created a non-refundable $500 credit for non-child dependents. Qualifying children must be younger than 17 years of age. The child credit begins to phase out when adjusted gross income (AGI) exceeds $400,000 (for married couples filing jointly, not indexed to inflation). These changes expire in 2025.
  • Student Loans: TCJA allows 529 plans to fund K to 12 private school tuition—up to $10,000 per year, per child. Under the SECURE Act of 2019, also signed by President Trump, the benefits of 529 plans were expanded, allowing plan holders to withdraw a maximum lifetime amount of $10,000 per beneficiary penalty-free to pay down qualified student loan debt.
  • Retirement Savings: The law repealed the ability to recharacterize one kind of contribution as the other, that is, to retroactively designate a Roth contribution as a traditional one, or vice-versa. Since the passing of the Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act in December 2019, individuals can contribute to Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) past 70½. Health savings accounts (HSAs) were not affected by the law.
  • Mortgage Interest: TCJA limits the mortgage interest deduction for married couples filing jointly to $750,000 worth of debt, down from $1,000,000 under the old law. The change expires after 2025.
  • State and Local Tax: The new law capped the deduction for state and local taxes at $10,000 through 2025.

Economic Growth

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said that the Republican tax plan would spur sufficient economic growth to pay for itself and more, saying of the “Unified Framework” released by Senate, House, and Trump Administration negotiators in September 2017:

“On a static basis our plan will increase the deficit by a trillion and a half. Having said that, you have to look at the economic impact. There’s $500 billion that’s the difference between policy and baseline. That takes it down to a trillion dollars. And there’s two trillion dollars of growth. So with our plan we actually pay down the deficit by a trillion dollars, and we think that’s very fiscally responsible.”

On Dec. 11, 2017, the Treasury released an analysis showing that the law will increase revenues by $1.8 trillion over 10 years. The economy experienced massive growth, unemployment was the lowest in 50 years, and workers received huge increases in wages, during the Trump Administration due, in part, to the TCJA.

Lower Income Will Suffer When TCJA Expires

Once individual tax cuts expire after 2025, the majority of taxpayers, 53.4%, will face a tax increase: 69.7% of those in the middle quintile (40th to 60th percentile) will pay more.

The Joint Committee on Taxation estimated that the 22 million households making $20,000 to $30,000 will collectively pay 26.6% more in tax year 2026 than they would under Trump’s TCJA. The 629,000 households making over $1,000,000 will pay 1% less.

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) was a major tax code overhaul signed into law by President Trump in 2017 and became effective for tax year 2018. TCJA cut taxes for shareholders and individual taxpayers alike. However, cuts for individual Americans expire in 2025, at which time the majority of taxpayers will face a significant tax increase.

Trump To Kill Carter’s Tips Tax

Trump To Kill Carter's Tips Tax

Disgusting! I recall Ole Jimmy whining about waiters (men) in exclusive restaurants in Manhattan working without wages because the tips were so high, while he abused waitresses (women) who slung hash in neighborhood diners. Although I had never been a waitress, I knew and he knew that 99% of waiters/waitresses were lucky to make

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Trump Vows To Cancel Taxes On Social Security Benefits

Trump Vows To Cancel Taxes On Social Security Benefits

In an hour-long press conference at Mar-A-Lago yesterday, President Donald J. Trump vowed to cancel income taxes on Social Security benefits. Of course, to do so, he will need a House & Senate controlled by Republicans. Virtually all elected Democrats at the national level are greedy, power-mad Socialists who dislike their fellow Americans and will vot…

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The author, Diane L. Gruber, is a First Amendment advocate who writes for Substack. She calls her Substack newsletter America First Re-Ignited.  

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