GOP Fractures Over Trump’s ’Big, Beautiful’ Tax Overhaul—Wall Street Grins
Republicans clash as the former president’s legacy tax cuts spark internal divisions—just as markets prep for another corporate bonus season.
Behind the ’pro-growth’ rhetoric: A fiscal time bomb or a lobbyist’s dream? Either way, someone’s getting a yacht.
GOP clash over raising the state and local tax deduction limit
The $10,000 SALT cap first appeared in President Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. It remains popular with most Republicans, especially those from lower-tax states. Republicans in Tennessee and Missouri say raising the cap gives unfair tax breaks to high-tax Democratic states. Republicans in coastal states say they send more money to Washington, which benefits low-tax states.
Some Republicans in states with green-energy companies don’t want big cuts to those tax credits. Representatives from Arizona and Pennsylvania say taking the credits away now WOULD hurt businesses that already counted on them.
In March, twenty-one House Republicans sent a letter urging leaders to keep those benefits. “Countless American companies are utilizing sector-wide energy tax credits, many of which have enjoyed broad support in Congress, to make major investments in domestic energy production and infrastructure for traditional and renewable energy sources alike,” they wrote.
Conservative fiscal hawks responded with their own letter, insisting that the fast-growing green-tech field is funded by government handouts, not genuine market demand.
“Leaving IRA subsidies intact will actively undermine America’s return to energy dominance and national security,” they said. “They are the result of government subsidies that distort the U.S. energy sector, displace reliable coal and natural gas and the domestic jobs they produce, and put the stability and independence of our electric grid in jeopardy.”
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