WASHINGTON (AP) =Start the countdown clock on a momentous two weeks for President Donald Trump and the GOP-run Congress.
Republicans
are determined to deliver the first revamp of the nation's tax code in
three decades and prove they can govern after their failure to dismantle
Barack Obama's health care law this past summer. Voters who will decide
which party holds the majority in next year's midterms elections are
watching.
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Republicans
are negotiating with Democrats on the contentious issue of how much the
government should spend on the military and domestic agencies to avert a
holiday shutdown. An extension of the program that provides low-cost
health care to more than 8 million children and aid to hurricane-ravaged
Puerto Rico, Texas and Florida need to be addressed. And further
complicating the end-of-year talks is the fate of some 800,000 young
immigrants here illegally.
Lawmakers are trying to get it all done by Dec. 22.
A look at the crowded agenda:
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TAXES
Republicans
are upbeat about finalizing a tax bill from the House and Senate
versions for Trump's first major legislative accomplishment in nearly 11
months in office.
"I
feel very confident we're going to get this done ... at the end of the
day we're going to get this to the president's desk and he's going to
sign it," House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said Sunday in
an interview on Fox News Channel.
The
House and Senate bills would cut taxes by about $1.5 trillion over the
next decade while adding billions to the $20 trillion deficit. They
combine steep tax cuts for corporations with more modest reductions for
most individuals.
Republican
leaders have struggled to placate GOP lawmakers from high-tax states
like California, New York and New Jersey whose constituents would be hit
hard by the elimination of the prized federal deduction for state and
local taxes. Repeal of the deduction added up to $1.3 trillion in
revenue over a decade that could be used for deep tax cuts.
Lawmakers
finally settled on a compromise in both bills — full repeal of the
state and local deductions for income and sales taxes, but homeowners
would be able to deduct up to $10,000 in local property taxes.
And yet it's still not a done deal.
"There's
a lot of conversation around the fact that in some of the blue states
where the taxes are high, the property tax alone, they will not be able
to use the $10,000 possible deductions," Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., said on
NBC's "Meet the Press with Chuck Todd" on Sunday. "So allowing for
income and property taxes, which would cost another $100 billion by the
way, to be options for folks in those states would be a better solution.
And we're looking at ways to make that happen."
Just
a few weeks ago, lawmakers were unyielding on their insistence that the
corporate tax rate be slashed from 35 percent to 20 percent. Now, one
way to finance the changes on state and local taxes would be to cut the
corporate tax rate to 21 or 22 percent instead.
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GOVERNMENT SPENDING
Republicans
and Democrats are trying to work out a sweeping budget deal. They got a
temporary reprieve from a partial government shutdown when they passed a
stopgap, two-week bill last Thursday.
Republicans want a major boost in defense spending. Democrats want a similar increase for domestic agencies.
Congress
also has to figure out how much disaster aid should be directed to
Puerto Rico, Texas and Florida. The Trump administration requested $44
billion last month, an amount lawmakers from hurricane-slammed regions
say is insufficient. The latest request would bring the total
appropriated for disaster relief this fall to close to $100 billion —
and the government still must calculate how much it will cost to rebuild
Puerto Rico's devastated housing stock and electric grid.
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CHILDREN'S HEALTH
Fresh
federal money for the Children's Health Insurance Program, known as
CHIP, ran out on Oct. 1, a blow to the widely popular program that
provides low-cost medical care to more than 8 million children. Some
states have relied on unspent funds, while others that were running out
of money got a short-term reprieve in the two-week spending bill.
Lawmakers hope to agree on a long-term budget solution for a program that's about $14 billion a year.
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IMMIGRATION
Democrats
want to act now to protect young immigrants who came to the United
States illegally as children, with demands that a solution is included
in any year-end spending deal.
"We
will not leave here without a DACA fix," said Minority Leader Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif., referring to the Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals program.
These
young immigrants, often referred to as Dreamers, face deportation in a
few months after Trump reversed administrative protections established
by President Barack Obama.
Republicans
say it can wait till next year and shouldn't bog down the broad budget
agreement. However, House GOP leaders likely will require Democratic
votes for the spending bill and they have to work out a deal with
Pelosi.
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Associated Press writers Marcy Gordon and Andrew Taylor contributed to this report.
By:Repoter
Birbal babu.

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