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Party lines could be the difference in tax law battles

By: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Issue date: 4/16/08 Section: Nation
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WASHINGTON - Tax Day, said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, is viewed by many as "sort of a national anti-holiday" and yesterday's debate in Congress on tax policy was more confrontation than celebration.

House Democrats, shrugging off a presidential veto threat and GOP opposition, took up legislation that would kill an IRS program under which private debt collectors are used to dun scofflaws and would crack down on the misuse of tax-free health savings accounts.

Republicans on both sides of the Capitol assailed Democratic plans to let some of the massive tax cuts passed in 2001 and 2003 expire, saying that would amount to the largest tax hike in U.S. history.

The disputes occurred as Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Douglas Shulman told a House Appropriations subcommittee that this tax-filing season has gone relatively smoothly. He said the agency, which expects to process almost 140 million individual returns this year, has already issued 75 million refunds worth an average $2,436. Payments from the economic stimulus package, going out to almost everyone filing a return, will be sent electronically or by mail from early May.

In a Senate Finance Committee hearing, chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., said it was way past time to simplify a system that, according to a National Taxpayers Union estimate, consumes 3.6 billion hours of individual taxpayer time every tax-filing year.

Baucus quoted Albert Einstein as saying that "the hardest thing in the world to understand is the income tax."

The House was considering a bill that takes incremental steps to make the system simpler and fairer. It would eliminate the requirement that people keep detailed records of calls made on employer-provided cell phones, would stop federal contractors from using foreign subsidiaries to evade Social Security and other employment taxes and would require that the IRS notify taxpayers if it suspects identity theft.

But the White House said two provisions in the bill could subject it to a presidential veto. One would require people to provide proof that any withdrawals from tax-free health savings accounts, strongly backed by the Bush administration, are used for medical expenses. The other would kill another administration priority, a program under which smaller-scale delinquency cases that the IRS would normally ignore are farmed out to two private debt collection companies. Those companies can receive up to 24 percent of the back taxes they retrieve.
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