The nonpartisan federal agency that analyzes legislation for Congress has been a real downer for the GOP as it tries to pass President Trump’s mega tax cut and agenda bill. Here’s what you need to know about the Congressional Budget Office controversy:
The CBO’s damaging analysis
Budget office findings fuel Democratic attacks:
- CBO analysis of House-passed bill provides fodder for Democrats
- Legislation would provide most financial benefit to higher earners
- Middle- and low-income earners making $55,000 or less wouldn’t save much
- Republicans left scrambling to prove bill will spur economic growth
The debt impact findings
CBO projects massive deficit increase:
- Legislation would add $3 trillion to $4.5 trillion to national debt over 10 years
- Democrats handed powerful talking point to stir opposition
- Deficit projections become central to Democratic messaging
- Republicans dispute CBO’s deficit calculations
Republican criticism of CBO methods
White House and GOP attack agency’s credibility:
- OMB Director Russ Vought says CBO uses gimmickry
- Vought claims analysis hides $1.4 trillion deficit reduction over ten years
- Says bill achieves savings partially through $1.7 trillion in reductions
- Republicans joined forces to discredit CBO as left-leaning agency
Historical accuracy disputes
GOP cites CBO’s past prediction failures:
- Revenue following Trump’s 2017 tax cuts $170 billion higher than CBO projections
- Economic growth was full 1.6% higher than CBO projected
- CBO’s combined revenue predictions fell short by half trillion dollars
- House Majority Leader Steve Scalise says CBO “always been wrong”
CBO’s nonpartisan status
Agency defends its independence:
- CBO created in 1974, considered entirely nonpartisan
- Staff prohibited from making campaign contributions
- Current director Phil Swagel worked in George W. Bush administration
- Swagel defended agency on CNBC saying “I am a Republican”
Democratic attacks on the bill
Party leverages CBO analysis for opposition:
- Bill slashes $1.3 trillion over 10 years from Medicaid and food stamps
- CBO projects nearly 11 million people would lose health insurance by 2024
- Sen. Elizabeth Warren says bill will “rip health care away from millions”
- Democrats echo 2017 messaging about helping rich over poor
Republican defense of tax cuts
GOP argues bill helps working class most:
- House Ways and Means Chairman Jason Smith says bill delivers biggest relief to working class
- Lower-income earners enjoyed biggest percentage cut from 2017 bill
- Those earning less than $30,000 would see taxes cut by 23%
- Increases take-home pay for lower-income earners by estimated $13,300
The bill’s specific provisions
Legislation includes multiple tax reduction measures:
- Permanently extends Trump’s 2017 tax cuts
- Eliminates taxes on tips and overtime
- Creates deduction for some auto loan interest payments
- Reduces taxes on Social Security collected by seniors
Economic growth projections
Competing forecasts for bill’s impact:
- White House Council of Economic Advisors projects 4.2% to 5.2% GDP increase over four years
- White House predicts 2.6% growth over decade
- CBO forecasted much lower 1.8% in economic growth
- Tax Foundation said bill will only boost economy by 0.8%
GOP leadership confidence
House Speaker dismisses CBO predictions:
- Mike Johnson says CBO “notorious for getting things wrong”
- Says 2025 legislation “will be jet fuel for America’s economy”
- Compares bill to 2017 tax cuts for economic impact
- Legislation poised for modifications in Senate
Read more:
• Republicans dispute CBO analysis of Trump’s tax cut bill
This article is written with the assistance of generative artificial intelligence based solely on Washington Times original reporting and wire services. For more information, please read our AI policy or contact Ann Wog, Managing Editor for Digital, at awog@washingtontimes.com
The Washington Times AI Ethics Newsroom Committee can be reached at aispotlight@washingtontimes.com.