President
The president’s proposal calls for creating a new 39.6% tax bracket for individuals earning at least $2.5 million, or couples making $5 million, according to people familiar with the discussion.
The president made the request in a Wednesday phone call to House Speaker
Representative
It remains unclear if the proposal would be accompanied by an expansion of the existing exemption for some small business income paid through the individual code.
If Congress approves Trump’s plan for a 39.6% rate, that would bring the top bracket to a level not seen since before Trump’s 2017 tax cut. The current top rate for individuals is 37%.
Trump has sent mixed signals on raising taxes on the wealthy. He has mused that such a levy could spur rich Americans to relocate to other countries and that it could harm Republicans at the ballot box.
Earlier:
But the proposal comes as lawmakers are struggling to find a way to pay for a multi-trillion-dollar package that Trump has dubbed the “one big beautiful bill” to extend his first-term tax cuts.
Republicans are under increasing pressure to limit the cost of the overall bill because they are struggling to find agreement on cuts to entitlement programs, including Medicaid health coverage for low-income Americans.
Increasing taxes on top-earners gives Republicans more wiggle room to make Trump’s 2017 tax cuts for households permanent and enact some of his campaign pledges, including eliminating levies on tips and overtime pay.
Creating a new tax rate on millionaires would raise $67.3 billion over ten years, according to a preliminary estimate provided to Bloomberg News by the non-partisan Tax Foundation. The group has previously projected that eliminating tax preferences for carried interest would raise $6.7 billion over a decade.
Raising taxes goes against long-standing Republican orthodoxy. Trump’s willingness to propose a tax hike for millionaires demonstrates how much he has remade the GOP in his own populist image.
Commerce Secretary
However, top Republicans have balked at other proposals that would raise levies on affluent households.
Representative
“Anytime the president asks for something, we will consider it,” he said.
Senator
“If the president weighs in in favor of it, then that’s going to be a big factor that we have to take into consideration,” Crapo said.
(Updates with Tax Foundation estimates, Lutnick comments)
--With assistance from
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Laura Davison, Meghashyam Mali
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