One Big Beautiful Bill, tax cuts
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Trump, Senate and Tax Cut
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Money Talks News on MSNThe 2026 Tax Cuts: How Much Could You Really Save?While every income group is expected to see some level of savings, a recent analysis by the Tax Policy Center suggests that the biggest benefits will go to higher-income households. The law extends and expands many provisions from Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act,
President Donald Trump’s sweeping tax and spending law, known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” will make permanent large tax cuts from the president’s first term. And it makes good on a campaign
About two-thirds of U.S. adults expect the new tax law will help the rich, according to the poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Most — about 6 in 10 — think it will do more to hurt than help low-income people. About half say it will do more harm than good for middle-class people and people like them.
Former Vice President Mike Pence wrote to Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on Monday to commend him for getting a massive reconciliation package that included an extension of the 2017 tax cuts across the finish line.
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The law that President Trump signed on July 4 ending tax incentives for wind and solar projects is expected to drive up electricity bills across the U.S., with some of the sharpest increases in Republican-led states, according to Energy Innovation, a nonpartisan think tank.
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East Idaho News on MSNHow Congress’s megabill will impact Idaho: Cuts to taxes, Medicaid, SNAP and moreThe Medicaid cuts recently approved by Congress and President Donald Trump could force states into difficult decisions, health policy experts say. Part of several major changes to Medicaid, the bill caps how much states can tax health care providers,
Grinnell College would have been the only Iowa school affected by a tax increase on colleges with large endowments in President Donald Trump's budget.
The tax benefit, which revives a provision of the 2017 tax cuts, only applies to business jets, not jets used for personal use.
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Today in Ohio podcast reveals how new vehicle-related fees are actually tax increases that disproportionately burden average Ohioans while wealthy residents enjoy significant income tax reductions