Politics Feed

The Senate recessed last week after failing to pass a bipartisan tax bill that the House approved back in January. On Jan. 31, after more than a year of negotiations, the House overwhelmingly approved a tax bill that included some popular business tax breaks and Child Tax Credit (CTC) enhancements. The House's 357-to-70 support of the Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act, plus its bipartisan origin — it was a compromise worked out by Democratic Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden of Oregon and Republican House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith of Missouri — seemed to indicate... Read more →


Americans Evan Gershkovich (at center of back group, the back of his head visible) and Alsu Kurmasheva (hugging one family member and reaching for another), after arriving at Joint Base Andrews late Aug. 1. They were among those who were wrongfully imprisoned in Russia, and finally released following an historic prisoner swap. (White House photo via Facebook) I cannot image what goes through the mind of a person wrongfully imprisoned in a foreign country. I do know what they aren’t thinking about. Taxes. But when these United States citizens finally do get home, they must consider their tax situation. The... Read more →


Photo by Tom Fisk In June, the Treasury Department announced that it netted more than $556 million in airline warrants, issued in connection with COVID-19 relief funds, that had been sold. The airlines issued the stock warrants in 2020 and 2021 as partial compensation for financial assistance and loans that Treasury provided to the airlines during the coronavirus pandemic. Provisions in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act); the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021; and the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 gave the federal government the option to purchase shares of airline stock at a set price,... Read more →


When the COVID-19 pandemic was at its worst in 2020 and 2021, Uncle Sam offered help to businesses who kept workers on payroll. But the Employee Retention Credit (ERC), like many tax benefits, was complicated. That's led to wrong claims, so the IRS is asking companies to review their claims, both filed or about to be submitted. The Internal Revenue Service says another major announcement about the Employee Retention Credit (ERC), the tax break created to help companies weather the COVID-19 pandemic’s economic challenges, is on the way. But until then, the agency is urging businesses to re-evaluate their filings.... Read more →


UPDATE, Sept. 5, 2025: Has your state joined Direct File? Check out this special Direct File 2025 Participating States page. GOP members of congress and the Internal Revenue Service are on a collision course when it comes to the agency’s Direct File program. Republican Reps. Adrian Smith of Nebraska and Chuck Edwards of North Carolina last week introduced legislation to block the IRS from continuing its Direct File program. Meanwhile, the Treasury Department also announced last week that another state has joined the Direct File program for the coming 2025 filing season. New Jersey is the latest jurisdiction to allow... Read more →


White House Facebook photo Last week was an interesting one politically. President Joe Biden decided to bow out of the 2024 presidential race, tapping his vice president, Kamala Harris, to run in his place. Enthusiasm for Harris has been high, and it looks like she’ll get the official nomination when Democrats gather next month in Chicago for their national convention. As with most second-in-command, Harris has been a behind-the-scenes member of the Biden Administration. She’s now performing more official, and more widely covered, duties, as well as hitting the campaign trail. But that still leaves many of us wanting to... Read more →


Photo by Bermix Studio on Unsplash The New York Times, like many newspapers, runs a weekly quiz in which readers can test their knowledge of newsworthy events that happened the previous week. In the newspaper’s July 19 quiz, question number 4 (below) about U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez's recent federal trial conviction caught my eye. You’ll know why the minute you look at the multiple choice answers offered. The last multiple choice charge is the correct one. Menendez was not charged with nor convicted of tax evasion. He was convicted of participating in a vast international bribery scheme, steering aid and... Read more →


Photo by Pixabay It’s true that correlation does not imply causation, but some Kentucky data seems to indicate that the Bluegrass State’s decision in 2018 to increase its cigarette tax rate not only boosted the state’s revenue, but also lowered smoking rates. It is also true that Kentucky's initial large tax revenue collection has steadily declined since the latest tax rate hike was implemented. But Kentucky Health News (KHN) reports that the last revenue count from the state’s department of revenue, $270.5 million as of June 30, is still well above the $211.8 million that was collected before the tobacco... Read more →


With the 2024 presidential convention season underway and election day nearing, Project 2025 has been betting a lot of attention. Donald Trump and his campaign staff have distanced themselves from it. GOP-VP nominee J.D. Vance has close ties to a key group promoting it. Some members of 45's first administration helped write it. But what exactly is Project 2025? The short answer, per its website, is that Project 2025 is a presidential transition project that will "pave the way for an effective conservative Administration." The a 900-plus-page hard-right policy document spells out how it would do that. The conservative Heritage... Read more →


A view of some of the vast acreage of Big Bend National Park in Brewster County, Texas. (Photo by Kay Bell) This summer, millions of people will visit national parks, forests, and wilderness areas. While the folks who live in near those sites appreciate the associated increase in the local economy, they also pay a price. Land owned by the federal government is generally not subject to taxation by state or local governments. But those jurisdictions still cover services for the tax-exempt U.S. acreage within their borders. Much of the expense is borne by counties that pay for road upkeep,... Read more →


For most U.S. families, summer vacation involves a road trip. Taking to the country’s highways is a chance to enjoy new landscapes, listen to (and sing along with) favorite playlists, and share time with the family. Road trips also mean stops for fuel, both for auto occupants and the vehicle. The good news for summer 2024 drivers is that the cost of gasoline isn’t that bad. AAA data show that the average price of gas as of mid-July is just more than $3.50 a gallon. That’s the same as the average price per gallon in 2023. Motorists in seven states,... Read more →


The tax community’s focus this year initially was on what the U.S. Supreme Court would decide in Moore v. United States. That case dealt with the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’s Mandatory Repatriation Tax on corporations’ foreign earnings. There was concern that if the justices invalidated the tax, which attributes the realized and undistributed income of an American-controlled foreign corporation to the entity’s American shareholders, the entire U.S. tax code could unravel. Those fears were alleviated on June 20 when the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) upheld the repatriation tax. But a new tax worry popped up in... Read more →


Photo by Clay Banks on Unsplash Nebraskans frustrated by their state’s inability to come up with property tax relief plan turned to a broader tax overhaul, the EPIC plan. EPIC stands for Eliminate all Property, Income and Corporate taxes. The measure would have constitutionally prohibited the legislature from imposing any tax except for a state-administered sales tax. EPIC was first introduced in the Nebraska legislature in 2023, but never made it out of committee. That’s when the plan to take it directly to the state’s voters was born. But that’s not going to happen either. Epic ballot initiative fail: “The... Read more →


That will leave a dozen states still taxing at least some food bought by grocery shoppers. My favorite section of my local H-E-B grocery. (Photo by Kay Bell) When you loaded up your grocery cart for your July 4th spread, you probably weren’t thinking about taxes. That’s because most of us live in states that, for the most part, don’t tax food. That’s not the case in 13 states. Those jurisdictions do tack a few percentage points of sales tax on most foodstuffs. But one of those states will join the no-grocery-tax ranks later this summer. In late August, Oklahoma’s... Read more →


Photo by cottonbro studio The Internal Revenue Service's whistleblower program helped the agency collect $338 million in fiscal year 2023. The IRS Whistleblower Office also noted in its 2023 report, issued on June 24, that it paid whistleblowers 121 awards, totaling $88.8 million, for the revenue-increasing information. That awards total was more than double the $37.8 million the office paid in fiscal 2022. But the total number of whistleblower awards for FY23 dropped, going from 132 in 2022 to 121 the following fiscal year. And to keep the Whistleblower Office on pace to help with tax compliance, the latest report... Read more →


The Internal Revenue Service’s long-standing goal of regulating noncredentialed tax preparers got some support from the Electronic Tax Administration Advisory Committee’s (ETAAC) 2024 annual report. Such oversight is one of a dozen recommendations in the latest ETAAC document, released June 26. It is one of three suggestions the panel directed to Congress; the remaining nine ETAAC recommendations are for the IRS. ETAAC goals: ETAAC is a volunteer panel established by Congress in 1988 to provide public input into the development and implementation of the IRS organizational strategy for, as the name says, electronic tax administration. To that end, ETAAC researches,... Read more →


An aerial view of planes at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City. (Photo by Miguel Ángel Sanz on Unsplash) It will be a while before we get a final accounting of the COVID-19 pandemic costs, but last week we some good and bad tax-related figures connected to the health crisis. On the negative side of the ledger, there are the Employee Retention Credit (ERC) claims. This program that helped businesses keep workers on payroll in 2020 and 2021, but a rash of post-pandemic claims has cost the U.S. Treasury, at last count, $230 billion. There is, however,... Read more →


Unsplash+ in collaboration with Getty Images Tipping for services apparently is misunderstood, which helps explain why it sparks resentment in some customers, including some of my own family members, I’m sad to say. So I thought I give unemotional artificial intelligence a shot at explaining it. Here’s what ChatGPT says about tipping. Tipping for services typically refers to giving an additional amount of money to service providers, such as waitstaff in restaurants, hairdressers, taxi drivers, or hotel staff, as a token of appreciation for their service. Tipping customs vary widely by country and culture, but it's generally seen as a... Read more →


Unsplash+ in collaboration with Getty Images The Employee Retention Credit (ERC) was created to help businesses stay afloat and keep staff on the payroll during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Basically, this tax credit’s benefits — thousands of dollars per employee that eligible companies kept paying — were for the 2020 and 2021 tax years. It has turned into a major tax headache, for both businesses and the Internal Revenue Service. But, says the IRS, it has made progress on evaluating the plethora of claims filed after the pandemic’s peak. And it has some good news for small businesses... Read more →


Unsplash+ in collaboration with Leire Cavia Juneteenth commemorates a key stage in the end of slavery, June, 19, 1865. That’s the day when official word arrived in Galveston, Texas, that President Abraham Lincoln had signed the Emancipation Proclamation 2½ years earlier. But even as we celebrate the newest U.S. federal holiday, we are aware that work remains to ensure fairness throughout the country. The latest challenge involves Fearless Funds, an Atlanta-based venture capital (VC) firm's nonprofit grant program. Grant issuance was halted this month by a federal appeals court panel ruling. Grants program, lawsuit background: Fearless Funds was sued last... Read more →