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DOW JONES BUSINESS NEWS: HOUSE GOP HUNTS FOR VOTES ON TAX BILL; SENATE PANEL CLEARS VERSION 79% match; Dow Jones Online News - USA ; 21-Jul-1999 03:21:00 am ; 1214 words
By Mark H. Anderson, Staff Reporter
WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- The schedule for House debate on a $792 billion tax-cut bill began to slip Wednesday as Republican leaders struggled to find enough votes for the package to pass, even as the Senate Finance Committee cleared its version of the bill.
However, the Senate panel rejected, by a decisive bipartisan margin, a proposal to cut income-tax rates by 10% across the board over a 10-year period.
In the House, GOP leaders have been working all week to get enough members of their party to support the tax legislation, which was scaled back from $864 billion over 10 years this week in an effort to get wavering moderate party members behind the bill. Most of the reduction came from delaying the implementation of tax reductions. The measure still faces a threatened White House veto.
Late in the day, it appeared the GOP leadership was within striking distance of the votes they needed.
A spokesman for House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R., Ill.) said late Wednesday that Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Archer (R., Texas) has agreed to modify the tax bill his committee recently approved by agreeing to insert language that would condition his proposed gradual 10% across-the-board cut in income tax rates to certain targets for reducing outstanding federal debt. That provision would seek to mollify the moderates.
The deal Republican leaders are near reaching with moderates would ensure that at least $375 billion of federal surpluses goes to debt reduction over the next 10 years, lawmakers involved in the negotiations said.
The proposal would also tie enactment of the tax cuts to a reduction in interest costs on the federal debt as a sort of enforcement mechanism to make certain the tax reductions don't take place without debt savings.
To pacify conversatives, Archer also has agreed to add an additional $80 billion over 10 years in marriage penalty relief when the House negotiates a compromise tax bill with the Senate. Conservative had been disappointed that the chairman's initial package didn't completely repeal a collection of tax code provisions that discriminate against some married couples.
Earlier in the day, GOP leaders insisted they were going to move ahead with debate on the bill despite comments from rank-and-file Republicans that the party appeared ready to put the measure on hold while they tried to salvage the bill.
House Majority Whip Tom Delay (R., Texas) said leaders remained short of the necessary votes to pass the bill despite the intense arm-twisting through closed-door meetings with various groups of lawmakers.
"We'll do it as soon as we've got the votes for it," Delay said. "Stay tuned."
The majority whip, who counts votes for the Republican party, said debate could begin by later this week, depending on whether they can increase support for the bill.
Around a dozen moderate Republicans have been withholding their support for the bill because they say it is too expensive over the next 10 years and takes precedence over the reduction of outstanding federal debt. They are also upset with who will benefit from some of the tax provisions and want legislation that does more for the middle-class.
As long as the moderates keep their ranks above five, it is difficult for the Republican leadership to press forward and risk seeing the tax cut package on the House floor. The Republican party has a five-vote majority over Democrats, who are expected to unanimously or almost unanimously oppose the Republican bill.
The moderates are under a fair amount of pressure from party leadership to back the bill for the good of the party. This is in part because changes to the bill to mollify moderates could erode support from conservatives, who have expressed their own reservations with the legislation.
House Ways And Means Chairman Bill Archer (R., Texas) said he believes his tax cut bill, approved last week along party lines in his committee, is a good bill that should draw strong support from his party.
"I thought we had put together a tax cut that was in the best interest of the country," Archer said.
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R., Miss.) said the Senate bill is likely to come up on the floor for debate the middle of next week.
The tax-cut package was approved by the finance panel 13-7 with Democrats John Breaux of Louisiana and Bob Kerrey of Nebraska joining all 11 panel Republicans in voting in favor of the bill.
"I think it moves the process forward," said Breaux, explaining his vote in favor of the GOP package that the White House has threatened to veto. Breaux said he expects Congress and the White House to ultimately agree on a package including Medicare reform and tax cuts in the neighborhood of $500 billion over the coming 10 years.
The vote rejecting the 10% income-tax cut was 13-7 against the measure, with Republican Sens. John Chafee (R., R.I.), Charles Grassley (R., Iowa), Jim Jeffords (R., Vt.) and panel chairman William Roth (R., Del.), joining all committee Democrats in opposing it.
The across-the-board cut was offered in conjunction with several other measures as an amendment to the overall bill authored by Roth.
Roth said he was forced to vote against the across-the-board cut because it couldn't command approval by a majority of his panel. "I am trying to put through legislation that will actually result in a tax cut for the American people," he said.
Roth worked overnight to assure the smooth passage of his measure by accepting a number of changes sought both by moderate Republicans and by Democrats willing to work with the GOP in moving forward toward an ultimate compromise at some later point in the year.
The chairman, for instance, accepted a Breaux proposal that would, for the first time, permit gold coins and other legal-tender coins to be invested in Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs).
Earlier, the committee, by voice vote, approved an amendment that would make a research and experimentation, or R&E, tax credit permanent. The measure was sponsored by Sen. Orrin Hatch (R., Utah).
The previous proposal extended the R&E credit for five years, as is the case in the tax bill recently approved by the House Ways and Means Committee.
The cost of making the credit permanent was covered by scaling back proposed increases in contribution limits for individual retirement accounts contained in the major tax package.
The committee also approved by voice vote an amendment sponsored by Sen. Kent Conrad (D., N.D.) that would provide a 15-year recovery period for the depreciation of commercial lease-hold improvements. At present such assets are depreciated over a period of 39 years.
The $2.7 billion, 10-year cost of the depreciation change was offset by delaying the implementation of a measure that would permit U.S,. multinationals to allocate interest costs in a more favorable manner for the purpose of determining foreign tax credits.
In yet another action, the committee approved by a vote of 13 to 7 an amendment offered by Grassley that would expand the current biomass tax credit to include any solid, nonhazardous, cellulose waste material derived from forest products, urban sources and most agricultural by-products.
The $492 million 10-year cost was offset by scaling back a proposed increase in the gift-tax exclusion contained in the underlying bill. |