Tax Cut Chances Rise as House Passes Budget Targeting Safety Net https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-02-26/trump-stumbles-as-gop-tax-cut-plan-delayed-despite-his-lobbying The House budget would pave the way for $4.5 trillion in tax cuts — about enough to pay for extending the expiring cuts but not enough to also cover Trump’s campaign promises for additional tax relief. The measure would add to the budget deficit despite calling for $2 trillion in overall spending cuts over ten years. The House budget calls for $2 trillion in cuts focused on safety-net programs like Medicaid, food stamps and education funding and calls for $300 billion in increased defense and border spending. The blueprint would raise the US debt limit by $4 trillion, avoiding a potential payment default this summer. The House passed the budget plan 217 to 215. All Democrats opposed it.
问了一下Grok to 1) elaborate on the bill, 2)对deficit的影响。见下。4.x trillion cut是over the next 10 years. 对债务的变化是从yearly 1.865T 到2.1到2.2T You’re right—thanks for the update! As of today, February 25, 2025, at 6:23 PM PST, the House did indeed pass a budget resolution with a vote of 217 to 212, according to your information and aligning with breaking news. This vote marks a key step in advancing President Trump’s agenda, including a significant tax cut package. Let’s dive into what this means, assuming it’s the House GOP’s framework we’ve been tracking, and its implications for the federal deficit. What Passed Today The bill, a fiscal year 2025 budget resolution, passed with a razor-thin margin, 217-212, reflecting near-unanimous Republican support (likely losing just one or two GOP votes) and no Democratic backing. It’s the House’s version, which bundles up to $4.5 trillion in tax cuts over 10 years with Trump’s priorities on border security, defense, energy deregulation, and immigration enforcement. This likely includes extending the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) provisions—set to expire December 31, 2025—like the 37% top individual rate, 21% corporate rate (possibly dropping to 15% for U.S.-made goods per Trump’s push), doubled standard deduction, and enhanced child tax credit. It also pairs these with $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion in spending cuts, though earlier drafts suggested flexibility: if cuts fall short, tax cuts might shrink to match. Details are still firming up, but House Speaker Mike Johnson and Trump have championed this “one big bill” approach over the Senate’s two-bill strategy. The resolution unlocks reconciliation, letting Republicans bypass the Senate filibuster with a simple majority (51 votes) once the Senate aligns. The Senate passed its own $340 billion resolution on February 21, sans tax cuts, so negotiations loom to merge these visions. Deficit Implications The $4.5 trillion tax cut figure comes from estimates to extend TCJA and add new breaks—like Trump’s 15% corporate rate idea. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) pegs TCJA extension alone at $4.2 trillion over 10 years (2026-2035), with interest pushing it to $4.6 trillion. Toss in new cuts, and $4.5 trillion tracks. The spending cuts, pegged at $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion, aim to offset part of this—think trims to Medicaid, SNAP, or discretionary programs—but leave a $2.5 trillion to $3 trillion gap, plus $500 billion to $1 trillion in extra interest, per groups like the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB). Before this, the CBO projected a 2025 deficit of $1.865 trillion. Adding $2.5 trillion to $3 trillion over 10 years (roughly $250 billion to $300 billion annually) could push yearly deficits toward $2.1 trillion to $2.2 trillion by the mid-2030s, assuming steady spending and revenue otherwise. Republicans argue growth from tax cuts and energy policies (e.g., drilling expansion) will offset some costs—maybe 20%-30% based on TCJA’s 11% investment bump—but skeptics point to TCJA’s $1.5 trillion deficit hit despite growth, suggesting this could drive the debt-to-GDP ratio from 100% now to 125%-130% by 2035 if growth undershoots. The Big Picture This bill’s passage today is a win for Trump and House GOP, but it’s step one. The Senate’s leaner plan (no tax cuts yet) means a conference fight ahead. If the full $4.5 trillion in cuts sticks without matching offsets, it’s a deficit booster—short-term economic juice for taxpayers and businesses, long-term pressure on borrowing costs and fiscal stability. If they scale back tax cuts or find more savings, the hit softens. Either way, it’s a bet on growth that’s got economists split—optimists see a roaring economy, realists see a debt pile growing faster than GDP. What’s your take—were you tracking this vote live, or did something specific in it catch your eye? I can zoom in on any piece if you’d like!
全国人民新增债务: 4 trillion (靠印钞机)
砍掉医疗和教育补助:2 trillion
给富人减税退税:4.5 trillion
给军火商新增:300亿
Tax Cut Chances Rise as House Passes Budget Targeting Safety Net
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-02-26/trump-stumbles-as-gop-tax-cut-plan-delayed-despite-his-lobbying
The House budget would pave the way for $4.5 trillion in tax cuts — about enough to pay for extending the expiring cuts but not enough to also cover Trump’s campaign promises for additional tax relief. The measure would add to the budget deficit despite calling for $2 trillion in overall spending cuts over ten years.
The House budget calls for $2 trillion in cuts focused on safety-net programs like Medicaid, food stamps and education funding and calls for $300 billion in increased defense and border spending.
The blueprint would raise the US debt limit by $4 trillion, avoiding a potential payment default this summer.
The House passed the budget plan 217 to 215. All Democrats opposed it.
穷人拿不到钱还算了,还莫名其妙背上了4万亿的债务,借钱就是为了给富豪们退钱减税
这下子通货膨胀要成脱缰野马了
补充一下:明明没钱退税了,居然还打肿脸充胖子借巨款去给富豪们退税,相当于家里都揭不开锅了,你砍了父母的医疗费用,停掉了老婆的伙食,取消了娃的课后班,然后刷爆自己所有信用卡去买爱马仕追一个富家女小三
只要变性人还要上厕所,其他这些在MAGA眼里都不是大事
川粉自己税率要降低了, 心里乐开了花。
You’re right—thanks for the update! As of today, February 25, 2025, at 6:23 PM PST, the House did indeed pass a budget resolution with a vote of 217 to 212, according to your information and aligning with breaking news. This vote marks a key step in advancing President Trump’s agenda, including a significant tax cut package. Let’s dive into what this means, assuming it’s the House GOP’s framework we’ve been tracking, and its implications for the federal deficit. What Passed Today The bill, a fiscal year 2025 budget resolution, passed with a razor-thin margin, 217-212, reflecting near-unanimous Republican support (likely losing just one or two GOP votes) and no Democratic backing. It’s the House’s version, which bundles up to $4.5 trillion in tax cuts over 10 years with Trump’s priorities on border security, defense, energy deregulation, and immigration enforcement. This likely includes extending the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) provisions—set to expire December 31, 2025—like the 37% top individual rate, 21% corporate rate (possibly dropping to 15% for U.S.-made goods per Trump’s push), doubled standard deduction, and enhanced child tax credit. It also pairs these with $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion in spending cuts, though earlier drafts suggested flexibility: if cuts fall short, tax cuts might shrink to match. Details are still firming up, but House Speaker Mike Johnson and Trump have championed this “one big bill” approach over the Senate’s two-bill strategy. The resolution unlocks reconciliation, letting Republicans bypass the Senate filibuster with a simple majority (51 votes) once the Senate aligns. The Senate passed its own $340 billion resolution on February 21, sans tax cuts, so negotiations loom to merge these visions. Deficit Implications The $4.5 trillion tax cut figure comes from estimates to extend TCJA and add new breaks—like Trump’s 15% corporate rate idea. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) pegs TCJA extension alone at $4.2 trillion over 10 years (2026-2035), with interest pushing it to $4.6 trillion. Toss in new cuts, and $4.5 trillion tracks. The spending cuts, pegged at $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion, aim to offset part of this—think trims to Medicaid, SNAP, or discretionary programs—but leave a $2.5 trillion to $3 trillion gap, plus $500 billion to $1 trillion in extra interest, per groups like the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB). Before this, the CBO projected a 2025 deficit of $1.865 trillion. Adding $2.5 trillion to $3 trillion over 10 years (roughly $250 billion to $300 billion annually) could push yearly deficits toward $2.1 trillion to $2.2 trillion by the mid-2030s, assuming steady spending and revenue otherwise. Republicans argue growth from tax cuts and energy policies (e.g., drilling expansion) will offset some costs—maybe 20%-30% based on TCJA’s 11% investment bump—but skeptics point to TCJA’s $1.5 trillion deficit hit despite growth, suggesting this could drive the debt-to-GDP ratio from 100% now to 125%-130% by 2035 if growth undershoots. The Big Picture This bill’s passage today is a win for Trump and House GOP, but it’s step one. The Senate’s leaner plan (no tax cuts yet) means a conference fight ahead. If the full $4.5 trillion in cuts sticks without matching offsets, it’s a deficit booster—short-term economic juice for taxpayers and businesses, long-term pressure on borrowing costs and fiscal stability. If they scale back tax cuts or find more savings, the hit softens. Either way, it’s a bet on growth that’s got economists split—optimists see a roaring economy, realists see a debt pile growing faster than GDP. What’s your take—were you tracking this vote live, or did something specific in it catch your eye? I can zoom in on any piece if you’d like!
砍了2万亿福利, 反而欠更多的钱.
只要有一个拿福利的吃了龙虾, 在MAGA眼里就是十恶不赦的楷政府的油,总统全家赶在上任前一天发币割屁民韭菜, 就完全没问题,pathetic
反正有AI 机器人代替,不需要那么多的人。
一声长叹, 美国人的智商是看不到这一点的。
看川总这操作手法,下次选举还有没有很难预测。或者两个候选人是:川总,Vance
哈哈,如果看每个人能收到多少钱的中位数,就不是一万五了,估计是负数。没听说过trickle down理论吗?
一般人理解不到这个点。 美国应该是川马敛财和复仇的工具吧,其他起哄的富豪也跟着得利。 可怜就是中底层的人,有人说得好“没钱生病就去死,没钱读书就不读,就当个无知的韭菜”
The US government collected $4.92 trillion in revenue in 2024. 呵呵, 富人和公司的税全退了。
黄川粉说中文被白垃圾MAGA揍了,第一时间是怪左b搞的
这种应该是给business减税 不是收入多少 而是收入得跟business 在一起 不是拿w2的
哈哈,富人也分大富小富,川总这种大富联邦退税,华人贫困线这种小富交税
top1 家庭收入75万以上的平均减$61,000,bottom 60% 家庭收入10万以下能减$400. 加关税后中产家庭每年多花 $1200,富人估计影响不大,反正也不买made in china的。 放水4trillion,钱更不值钱了。 请大家对号入座。
https://www.cbpp.org/research/federal-tax/2025-budget-stakes-high-income-tax-cuts-price-hiking-tariffs-would-harm
他们正在弹冠相庆
然。
然而美国精英洗脑年年月月日日秒秒超级成功
45万亿,每人15万,平均到每年1.5万/人
🇺🇸中位数人均收入现在多少?这还是税前的。
资本家笑醒了
说民主党干的就行了.
这么又蠢又贱的人,居然还有一大群!
深蓝州的家长群,疫情期间发了钱,里面好几个川粉就在讨论可以去Costco买海鲜买龙虾
不对啊 不是说富人都不交税 税收都是中产和穷人呢交的吗?你现在说4.92 trillion里4.5都是富人交的税? 现在要给他们减?
公司税,遗产税都是的