Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Trump’s first year will be filled with fiscal follies

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Relief swept Washington, DC after Congress ended a budget standoff and passed a short-term spending bill on December 21, averting a government shutdown. But that year-end legislative battle may foretell further fiscal chaos in 2025, including the risk of another downgrade of US debt.

Donald Trump will take office on January 20 with his fellow Republicans running both houses of Congress. That Republican “trifecta”—full control of the legislative and executive branches—has boosted hopes that Trump will be able to extend a huge set of tax cuts due to expire at the end of 2025, and perhaps rein in government spending.

The Trump agenda, however, now looks a lot shakier, and the recent funding battle demonstrates why.

Though Republicans control the House, the party is split into factions, including a group of budget hawks that numbers more than 30. Those Republicans are dead-set against tax cuts or spending hikes that add substantially to the national debt, now more than $36 trillion.

The December 21 spending bill passed the House by a comfortable 366-34 margin—but that’s because every Democrat voted for it. Democrats were willing to join most Republicans in voting for the bill so President Biden doesn’t have to manage an unpopular shutdown during his final days in office. Once the House voted, the Senate passed the funding bill without any problem.

Chaos ahead? President-elect Donald Trump speaks at AmericaFest, Sunday, Dec. 22, 2024, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

But minority Democrats aren’t likely to vote for Republican priorities once Trump takes office. And once the next Congress convenes on January 3, Republicans will have just a five-seat majority, which is even thinner than the current GOP breakdown. That means partisan legislation will require virtually every Republican vote, a feat that has become notoriously difficult in the fractious GOP during the last several years.

Republican lawmakers are already working on a huge set of tax cuts meant to be the capstone for the first year of Trump’s second term. That includes an extension of all the individual tax cuts enacted in 2017, which expire at the end of 2025. Republicans also hope to include new measures Trump has proposed, such as eliminating the income tax on tips.

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But the latest revenue fight raises fresh doubts about whether Republicans can get it done.

“Our discussions with Republican staff on Capitol Hill have increasingly suggested that a partisan bill that addresses the expiring [tax cuts] will be inordinately difficult, if not impossible, to pass next year,” Henrietta Treyz, co-founder of Veda Partners, wrote in a recent analysis. “The government funding debate neatly illustrates why Republican staff is feeling anxious about their prospects next year.”

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