GOV/MIL Republican senators are considering watering down “no taxes on tips,” “no taxes on overtime” and more

thompson

Certa Bonum Certamen

Capitol agenda: GOP eyes cuts to Trump’s tax promises

Republican senators are considering watering down “no taxes on tips,” “no taxes on overtime” and more.

By Benjamin Guggenheim, Mia McCarthy, Lisa Kashinsky, Calen Razor and Ben Leonard
06/10/2025, 8:00am ETUpdated: 06/10/2025, 9:59am ET

Senate Finance Republicans are increasingly looking to dial back key items on President Donald Trump’s tax policy wish list. And it’s pitting them against the architect of the House-passed tax legislation, Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith — and potentially even the White House.

The rub is this: The House version of the megabill would restore tax incentives for research and development, business equipment and debt interest through 2029, which Trump has indicated he supports. But Senate Republicans are dead-set on making them permanent, a proposition that would likely add hundreds of billions in more red ink to the legislation.

To offset that cost, GOP senators are looking to water down other tax provisions they believe aren’t as “pro-growth.” Those policies include “no taxes on tips,” “no taxes on overtime” and tax relief for seniors — all proposals Trump touted on the campaign trail and collectively boast a price tag of roughly $230 billion, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation.

Smith is warning senators to tread carefully in challenging Trump’s desires.

“I think that the United States Senate will not want to scale down the president’s priorities. No tax on tips, no tax on overtime are two of his top priorities,” the Missouri Republican told reporters Monday. “Are there some tweaks that they can do to it that I would recommend? Yes, and I have recommended.”

But some Senate Republicans who sit on the Finance panel have made clear they have their own ideas. When POLITICO asked Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) whether he believes “no tax on tips” or “no tax on overtime” are pro-growth, he gave a terse “nope.”

“They’re making a case to increase the labor supply,” the Wisconsin Republican told POLITICO. “I would just extend the current tax law.”

Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) has likewise been pushing to make changes to both policies, telling POLITICO on Monday that “no tax on overtime” should be rewritten to ensure it applies only to people working over 40 hours a week.

White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said “No Tax on Overtime and No Tax on Tips are presidential priorities that 80 million Americans voted for in November.”

“They will remain in this historic piece of legislation in order to deliver the largest tax cut in history,” she added.

Meanwhile, House Republicans are hoping to tweak some language in their bill they believe the Senate parliamentarian will identify as non-compliant with the budget reconciliation process. They’ll do so by using a procedural maneuver within the Rules Committee that won’t require the chamber to take a standalone vote on a revised measure, five people told POLITICO.

House Republican leaders expect a report on the potential Senate problems Tuesday morning, though Majority Leader Steve Scalise (La.) acknowledged they may not have the full list before the Rules hearing scheduled for later Tuesday.

“I don’t think there will be any big surprises,” Speaker Mike Johnson added Monday, “but that’s part of the process.”

What else we’re watching:

— Rescissions heads to Rules: The House Rules Committee is scheduled to vote on the White House’s rescissions package at 2 p.m. Tuesday, paving the way for a floor vote by Thursday. Johnson and Scalise are confident they can appease members’ concerns about clawing back money Congress has already green-lighted and slashing funding for the PEPFAR program and public media.

— Crypto vote imminent: Senate Majority Leader John Thune wants to pass landmark cryptocurrency legislation this week that would create new rules for dollar-pegged digital tokens. He teed up the stablecoin bill for another procedural vote as soon as Wednesday.

— Trump admins on the Hill: A slew of Trump administration officials will testify before various House and Senate committees Tuesday on the president’s fiscal 2026 budget requests for their agencies. That includes Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Gen. Dan Caine, NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya, CIA Director John Ratcliffe and Energy Secretary Chris Wright.
 

Hammer

Veteran Member
They were never good ideas to start with. How about just cut taxes for everyone? Why should there be "special" types of compensation that don't get taxed. If I make 20/hour wages, versus 5/hour wages plus 15/hour in tips, why should the person making tips pay less in taxes? I'm a little more sympathetic to over time, but still doesn't make sense.
 

BornFree

Came This Far
It should be watered down. It is highly unfair to all the people working other jobs. Imagine this provision on no tax on tips is so vague that a high end waiter making $1000.00 a nigh in tips does not have to pay tax on it. Those that make very little were unlikely to pay taxes anyways.
 

Blacknarwhal

Three-Time Trump Voter
A little reminder for Senate Repukes... MOST of their votes come from working people. Keep draining them dry and they'll vote differently.

Really? We will? We'll vote Dem all of a sudden, where we'll not only slit our own throats economically but be called racist while we do it?

They know they're the better of two bad options at this point.
 

Elza

Veteran Member
Really? We will? We'll vote Dem all of a sudden, where we'll not only slit our own throats economically but be called racist while we do it?

They know they're the better of two bad options at this point.
True if these were the only two options available.

The idea is to primary out the RINOs and vote in real Republicans. However, we all know how rarely this happens. Unfortunately people are to lazy to actually find out whom they are voting for. They simply vote for familiar names RINOs and all.
 

Blacknarwhal

Three-Time Trump Voter
True if these were the only two options available.

The idea is to primary out the RINOs and vote in real Republicans. However, we all know how rarely this happens. Unfortunately people are to lazy to actually find out whom they are voting for. They simply vote for familiar names RINOs and all.

"Real Republicans." Those are tough enough to find. Especially when you consider how many promise they are and turn out not to be later.
 

rlm1966

Veteran Member
Seems like repukes need to accept that they are going to lose to the democraps and they are polling sub 20%. Also means Trump should be expecting incoming impeachments Feb 2027. They could have had it all and for a long time and instead they are going to hand it back to the democraps.
 

Jez

Veteran Member
Seems like repukes need to accept that they are going to lose to the democraps and they are polling sub 20%. Also means Trump should be expecting incoming impeachments Feb 2027. They could have had it all and for a long time and instead they are going to hand it back to the democraps.
The problem is the Repukes have a long history of pissing away victories. Looks like that history continues.
 

Jez

Veteran Member
I'm beginning to think that this Republic is lost. What's the point of electing a Trump like president because he will always be hamstrung by Congress.

What kinda worries me now is when Trump is gone the left are going to go full bore. The stuff I stumble upon on Reddit suggests they are already making their lists. They are taking notice of who has Trump signs and who's removing them. When IT happens I'm afraid that the Right is going to be surprised at the level of organizing and the thirst for blood they have. They fully believe that Trump is Hitler and his supporters are Nazis and it's their duty to go Nazi hunting.

Maybe it's all talk from keyboard kommandos.
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
It's like you folks believe there's a two party system still.......although the two party's are, them and us.

Of course the RINO's are gonna throw the races, when and where they can. They don't want Trump to fix their broken games...........they are the problem, the wolves in sheep's clothing.
 
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