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GOP Payroll Tax Cut Details

By Jamie Dupree
Dec 9, 2011

House Republicans have laid out the details of their plan to extend a payroll tax cut through 2012 - and much more.  Here are the details as laid out in a release by Speaker John Boehner's office:

Extends Current Payroll Tax Relief, Protects Social Security

The bill provides a one-year extension of the temporary payroll tax relief enacted in 2010 and allows Americans to keep more of their own money, rejecting the Democrats’ plan to increase taxes on job creators. The measure protects the Social Security Trust Fund from being harmed by cutting government spending and directing those savings to replenish the trust fund.  Specifically, the measure:

Reforms UI Program & Extends Benefits for Americans Struggling in the Obama Economy

The bill permanently reforms the federal unemployment insurance (UI) program and extends benefits to those who are struggling in President Obama’s economy.  Recognizing that unemployment services should focus on helping Americans get back to work, the bill uses a two-step process to gradually reduce current maximum weeks of benefits from 99 to 59 weeks, a common-sense level that is in line with past recessions and economic downturns (President Obama’s own plan recognizes that American taxpayers cannot subsidize benefits for an unprecedented, unending period of time by reducing the maximum weeks by 20 next year).

The measure permanently reforms unemployment insurance to reduce waste, cut costs, and increase state flexibility – consistent with the Jobs, Opportunities, Benefits & Services (JOBS) Act approved by the Ways & Means Committee in May.  For example:

Job Creation Initiatives

As part of Republicans' continuing focus on jobs, including the GOP's  Plan for America's Job Creators , the measure includes several key jobs initiatives:

Includes Two-Year “Doc Fix,” Further Defunds ObamaCare

The bill provides a two-year “doc fix” and savings to offset the cost, including further defunding the President’s health care law.  A two-year “doc fix” extension is the longest stretch of time in nearly a decade.  Bringing this level of stability to physicians will pave the way for a permanent solution.  Specifically, the bill:

Reforms & Extends Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program

The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, which replaced the prior open-ended welfare entitlement with a fixed federal block grant as part of the 1996 welfare reform law, expires December 31, 2011.  The bill extends the $16.5 billion TANF block grant at its current funding levels through FY 2012, and makes two reforms to (1) improve program administration by standardizing data elements to improve integrity and collaboration; and (2) close the current “strip club loophole” to ensure that welfare funds cannot be accessed in strip clubs, liquor stores, and casinos by blocking welfare electronic benefit transfer (EBT) cards from working in ATMs there.

Spending Cuts – Not Tax Hikes on Job Creators – to Offset Payroll/UI Extension

The bill includes spending cuts in government programs – not tax increases on job creators – to fully pay for extending current payroll tax relief and unemployment insurance benefits.  This includes extending the current pay freeze for federal workers, including Members of Congress, eliminating government benefits for millionaires & billionaires, targeting fraud and abuse, and reforming entitlement programs – many ideas for which President Obama has already expressed support.  Specifically, the bill:

House Republicans have laid out the details of their plan to extend a payroll tax cut through 2012 - and much more.  Here are the details as laid out in a release by Speaker John Boehner's office: Extends Current Payroll Tax Relief, Protects Social Security The bill provides a one-year ...

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Jamie Dupree

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