House Republicans, Push Forward
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The House GOP has been engulfed in a MAGA firestorm after posting a message on X that was translated into Spanish. The official account was trying to signal that “every American” could benefit from Republican policies,
Key Senate Republicans are resisting the House’s plan to gut clean energy tax credits, vowing to soften the blow for emerging technologies.The pushback comes just a day after House Republicans released a plan to help pay for an extension of President Donald Trump’s tax cuts by cutting more than $500 billion in energy tax credits from former President Joe Biden’s signature climate law.
According to the plan, the residential clean energy credit, which provides a 30% tax credit for home solar panels, batteries, geothermal heat pumps and more, would expire at the end of 2025. The credit is currently set to expire at the end of 2034. The tax credit for rooftop solar panels has existed, in some form or another, since 2005 .
After a marathon markup stretching over 17 hours, the House Ways and Means Committee advanced sweeping cuts to Democratic renewable energy and climate tax credits as part of the tax portion of the massive fiscal overhaul Republicans are aiming to pass to enact much of President Donald Trump ‘s domestic agenda.
House GOP plows ahead to advance key components of its bill to fund Trump’s agenda -- including taxes and Medicaid cuts -- even as they remain at odds within.
23hon MSN
A proposal by Republicans in Congress would allow President Donald Trump's administration to remove the tax-exempt status of nonprofits that it says support terrorism.
WASHINGTON – House Republicans plan to enact work requirements and more frequent eligibility checks for Medicaid, according to a proposal released late on May 11 by a key GOP-led committee.
House Republicans on three key committees are working to advance their respective portions of President Donald Trump's reconciliation bill.
1don MSN
WASHINGTON (AP) — House Republicans revealed the sweeping tax provisions for President Donald Trump’s big bill Monday, tallying at least $4.9 trillion in costs so far, partly paid for with reductions to Medicaid and other programs used by millions of Americans.