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Biden administration moves to protect Alaska wilderness; opening statements and first witness in NY trial; SCOTUS hears Starbucks case, with implications for unions on the line; rural North Carolina town gets pathway to home ownership.

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The Supreme Court weighs cities ability to manage a growing homelessness crisis, anti-Israeli protests spread to college campuses nationwide, and more states consider legislation to ban firearms at voting sites and ballot drop boxes.

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Wyoming needs more educators who can teach kids trade skills, a proposal to open 40-thousand acres of an Ohio forest to fracking has environmental advocates alarmed and rural communities lure bicyclists with state-of-the-art bike trail systems.

Experts: Senate Tax Bill Favors Wealthy

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Tuesday, November 21, 2017   

PHOENIX – Analysts say the tax bill moving quickly through Congress benefits corporations, rich professionals and wealthy families - at the expense of the deficit and ultimately everyone else.

Republicans have promised that the tax bill would raise wages. But they admit the bill would cost $1.5 trillion over ten years. By the time it's fully implemented, 80 percent of that would be going to pay for a big corporate tax cut, a slashing of the estate tax and a cut in taxes on pass-through income.

Howard Gleckman, a senior fellow at the Urban/Brookings Tax Policy Center, says those tax cuts for businesses and rich households are permanent, while the parts that help the middle class expire.

"For high-income people, it's all about business taxes and corporate taxes, and of course the estate tax," he says. "And in fact, the winners and losers change over time, and actually you get more losers as time goes on."

Republican leaders in the Senate are pushing to rush the bill through, hoping to have it done within a few weeks. The bill eliminates the ability to deduct what you pay in state and local taxes off your income - a deduction currently used by 21 percent of Arizonans, to collectively save about $4 million.

Pass-through income is money made by a business that the owner - often a professional such as a doctor or a lawyer - declares as income rather than as profit. Supporters of the tax bill point to this as helping small businesses.

But, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, half of pass-through income goes to the top one percent.

Chuck Marr, the director of federal tax policy at the think tank, says congressional Republicans are already saying they plan to use the increased deficits to call for cuts in programs used by seniors, the middle class and working families.

"As soon as the ink is dry on this bill, we're going to see Republicans point to that debt, point to those deficits," he explains. "They'll go after Medicaid, they'll go after nutrition, they'll go after education, access to college."

Marr says despite the "America first" trade rhetoric coming out of Washington, the bill would also encourage multinational corporations to make their money offshore by reducing the taxes they would pay when bringing their profits home.


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