Plus, Senate to vote on Saturday
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [The Fisc]( Â Â By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey Happy Thursday! The Senate is set for a busy weekend as Democrats look to pass their budget reconciliation bill in the coming days. Weâll be back in your inbox Monday barring any breaking budget reconciliation news tomorrow. Until then, hereâs whatâs happening. (Reuters/Dado Ruvic) US Declares Monkeypox a Public Health Emergency
Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra announced Thursday that the viral disease known as monkeypox is now a public health emergency in the U.S. The emergency declaration frees up federal funds for health agencies to use for testing, treatment and tracking of the disease. The money may also be used to develop new tests and treatments, with an accelerated review process at the Food and Drug Administration. In addition, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will now have access to a wider range of information from states and cities about the progress of the current outbreak. Health officials have identified more than 6,600 probable or confirmed cases in the U.S. since the first case was detected in May, with the vast majority of infections concentrated among gay men. According to the CDC, the U.S. has the largest number of cases, which have been recorded in every state except Montana and Wyoming. Worldwide, more than 26,000 cases have been reported. Some states and cities â including national hotspot New York City â have already declared emergencies over the disease, and the Biden administration has been criticized for moving too slowly on the issue. Lawrence Gostin, who specialized in public health law at Georgetown, [told Bloomberg News]( that the declaration should help health officials get a better handle on the disease. âThe window for containing monkeypox is rapidly closing, but I think it is possible to contain the outbreak,â he said. âBut we need a revved-up response at the federal and state level. And that includes declaring a national emergency.â Some critics, however, say the Biden administration waited too long to make the emergency declaration. âI donât really understand why they didnât do this weeks ago,â [said]( James Krellenstein of PrEP4All, an AIDS advocacy group. âThis is all too late.â Vaccine on the way: Health officials have shipped about 600,000 doses of the smallpox vaccine Jynneos, which can also be used against monkeypox. According to CNN, the vaccine had been stored in Denmark, before the CDC ordered it to be packaged in single doses and shipped to U.S. states about three weeks after the first case was reported. Health clinics in major cities have been administering the vaccine, with an emphasis on reaching gay men, the LGBTQ community and health care workers. One hurdle for the campaign is that the vaccine requires two doses, delivered four weeks apart. Health officials say they are looking into whether a different, more efficient dosing regimen is possible. Schumer Plans First Vote Saturday on Inflation Reduction Act
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) announced Thursday that Democrats plan to hold the first procedural vote Saturday afternoon on their health care, climate and tax bill.
The legislation, called the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, is not ready yet. Lawmakers reportedly continue to meet with the Senate parliamentarian to review the billâs provisions and ensure they meet the special requirements for budget reconciliation, the process Democrats want to use to avoid the threat of a Republican filibuster. Additional meetings with the parliamentarian are reportedly set for Friday.
At the same time, Democrats are still working to lock down the support of Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ), the centrist holdout who is reportedly seeking to remove the billâs provision to close the [carried-interest loophole]( a measure that is projected to raise $14 billion in revenue over 10 years. Sinema reportedly is also looking to add about $5 billion in funding to combat droughts to the package. The Wall Street Journalâs Andrew Duehren reports that aides are also preparing for changes to the billâs 15% minimum tax on large corporations with profits that top $1 billion.
Schumerâs announcement of an initial procedural vote Saturday afternoon sets a deadline of sorts for Sinema and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) to finalize the bill ahead of what promises to be a lengthy floor debate of up to 20 hours followed by a âvote-a-rama,â a series of amendment votes with no set time limit.
The bottom line: Democrats still have some hurdles to clear, but final Senate passage of the Inflation Reduction Act could come as soon as Sunday night. Former IRS, Treasury Chiefs Say Dem Bill Will Help Catch Wealthy Tax Cheats
âWhen you under-fund the IRS, itâs just a tax cut for tax cheats.â Thatâs what former IRS head John Koskinen told The New York Times last year in a discussion about the Biden administrationâs plan to beef up the countryâs beleaguered tax agency. This week, Koskinen joined with two other former IRS chiefs to express support for Democratsâ Inflation Reduction Act, which includes an additional $80 billion over nine years to enhance enforcement at the IRS. On Thursday, Koskinen, who led the IRS in the Obama administration, released a joint letter expressing support for the proposed budget plan. He was joined by Fred Goldberg, who led the agency under President George H. W. Bush, and Charles Rossotti, who led the IRS under President Bill Clinton. The former commissioners said the bill would provide a much-needed boost to the IRS, which âhas shrunk to 1970s levels with technological infrastructure that is decades out-of-date and an audit rate that has dropped by 50 percent,â they wrote. âThe sustained, multi-year funding contained in the reconciliation package is critical to help the agency rebuild. That will mean vastly improved services for taxpayers, who will be able to interact with a modernized IRS in a digital way, whose questions will be answered and issues resolved promptly and fairly, and who will find it simpler to get access to the benefits and credits to which they are entitled,â the commissioners added. They also disputed Republican claims that the increased funding would be used by the agency to go after middle-class taxpayers and small businesses. âIn fact, for ordinary Americans who already fulfill their tax obligations, audit scrutiny will decline, because the IRS will be better at selecting returns for examination,â they wrote. âThis bill is about getting to the heart of the problem and pursuing high-end taxpayers and corporations who today illegally evade their tax obligations.â Former Treasury secretaries join the chorus: Five former Treasury secretaries from both major parties issued a statement Wednesday expressing support for the Democratic bill.
âThis legislation will help increase American competitiveness, address our climate crisis, lower costs for families, and fight inflationâand should be passed immediately by Congress,â said Robert Rubin, Larry Summers, Jacob Lew, Tim Geithner and Henry Paulson. The former secretaries said the bill was âfinanced by prudent tax policy that will collect more from top earners and large corporations.â And they pushed back against the idea that the bill would raise taxes on middle-class households. âTaxes due or paid will not increase for any family making less than $400,000/year,â they wrote. âAnd the extra taxes levied on corporations do not reflect increases in the corporate tax rate, but rather the reclaiming of revenue lost to tax avoidance and provisions benefiting the most affluent.â --------------------------------------------------------------- Send your feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com. And please encourage your friends to [sign up here]( for their own copy of this newsletter.
--------------------------------------------------------------- News - [âListen to the American People,â Biden Says, Urging Passage of Economic Package]( â Washington Post
- [Sinemaâs Demands on Carried Interest, Taxes Imperil Manchin Deal]( â Bloomberg
- [Kyrsten Sinema, GOP Fuel Fears for Fate of Democratsâ Climate Plan]( â Wall Street Journal
- [Sinemaâs Support for the Tax and Climate Bill Could Hinge on Drought Funding for the Southwest]( â CNN
- [Carmakers Say the Climate Bill Sets Impossible Targets]( â Washington Post
- [Biden Administration Making Plans to Use Public Health Emergency Authorities to Combat Monkeypox]( â Politico
- [Alternate Monkeypox Treatment Caught in Regulatory Delays]( â Axios
- [Where Does the Fed Go From Here? For Jay Powell, the Only Focus Is Inflation]( â Bloomberg Businessweek
- [US Recession Odds Are Falling Fast, JPMorgan Trading Model Shows]( â Bloomberg
- [Meet the Doomsayers: Five Who Say US Economy Will Keep Shrinking]( â Bloomberg
- [âThey Are Not Slowing Downâ: The Rise of Billion-Dollar Disasters]( â Washington Post
- [âNever Seen It This Badâ: America Faces Catastrophic Teacher Shortage]( â Washington Post
- [Georgia Says âUnborn Childâ Counts as Dependent on Taxes After 6 Weeks]( â Washington Post
- [A Right-Wing Think Tank Claimed to Be a Church. Now, Members of Congress Want to Investigate]( â ProbPublica Views and Analysis - [Team Soft Landing Is Starting to Pull Ahead]( â Jared Dillian, Bloomberg
- [Blame History, Not Biden, for Making Recession Calls So Hard]( â Justin Fox, Bloomberg
- [The Vibes in the Economy Are ⦠Weird. Really Weird]( â Kyla Scanlon, New York Times
- [The Democrats Are Taking Joe Manchin for a Ride]( â Ramesh Ponnuru, Bloomberg
- [Two Cheers for the Inflation Reduction Act]( â New Republic
- [Democrats Complicate the Private Equity Tax Loophole]( â Dan Primack, Axios
- [Private Equity Doesnât Want You to Read This]( â Farhad Manjoo, New York Times
- [Democracy Is Hard. Itâs Supposed to Be]( â Jonathan Bernstein, Bloomberg
- [The GOP Is Sick. It Didnât Start With Trump]( â And Wonât End With Him â Dana Milbank, Washington Post Copyright © 2020 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
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