House Republicans made it clear whose side they are
on today by voting to pass a $3 million tax cut for millionaires and
billionaires.
The final vote was 240-179 along mostly party lines.
Speaker of the House John Boehner tried to sell his tax cut millionaires and billionaires as
a bill that helps families by righting a wrong, “Family farmers,
ranchers, and small business owners work tirelessly to create jobs in
our communities, put food on our tables, and – God willing – have
something to pass on to their children and grandchildren. Taking away
that opportunity with a massive death tax bill is simply wrong. And
while the money is nothing more than a drop in the bucket to the federal
government, it can prove devastating to families – forcing them to sell
land, lay off workers, and even shut down entirely. The Death Tax
Repeal protects families and small businesses, and makes it easier for
them to grow and plan for the future. We’ve also taken another step to
bring more certainty to the tax code by extending and making permanent a
provision allowing families and small businesses to deduct sales tax
from their tax filings, helping them keep more of what they earn. These
are common-sense bills that make the tax code simpler and fairer for
hardworking families and I urge the president to reconsider his
opposition to these measures.”
The White House debunked Boehner’s death tax fairy tale in their threat to veto this bill,
“Repealing the estate tax exclusively benefits just the wealthiest one
or two estates out of every thousand—which would receive a tax cut
averaging more than $3 million each—because current law already exempts
more than $5 million of wealth for individuals and more than $10 million
of wealth for couples from the tax. Given these large exemptions, well
over 99 percent of Americans, including virtually all small businesses
and family farms, do not pay any estate tax. H.R. 1105 would also shift a
greater share of the tax burden onto working Americans at a time when
the top one percent already holds more than 40 percent of the Nation’s
wealth and wealth disparities have risen to levels not seen since the
1930s.”
Republicans have made it clear who they are standing
with. The GOP isn’t supporting hard working people who are falling
behind a little more each day. John Boehner showed more sympathy for the
plight of a few thousand of the richest families in the country than he
ever has for working class Americans.
The good news is that Senate Democrats are certain
to block this bill, and if, by some off chance, the legislation would
get to President Obama’s desk, he has promised to veto it. This vote
demonstrated the Republican priorities in the clearest way.
John
Boehner loves to claim that he works for “The People’s House,” and
today’s vote demonstrated exactly who the people are that the Speaker is
working for.
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