Biden signs $1.9 trillion stimulus bill, making $1,400 checks and child tax credit official:
President Joe Biden on Thursday signed the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package, which includes a third stimulus check, for up to $1,400, and an expanded child tax credit. The IRS and Treasury will begin to send the new stimulus checks as soon as this weekend, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Thursday at a press briefing.
The bill signing comes just one day after the amended bill passed in the House by a vote of 220-211. The House initially passed the bill on Feb. 26, and the Senate approved it last week, albeit with some changes.
[...] Democrats had been pushing to get the stimulus package signed into law before current unemployment benefits expire March 14. Biden was originally scheduled to sign the bill on Friday, but it got moved forward after Congress sent the final bill to the president more quickly than anticipated, Psaki said on Thursday.
The stimulus package, called the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, includes changes made by the Senate last week, such as reducing income limits for the third stimulus payment and lowering proposed weekly unemployment benefits from $400 a week to $300 a week (though they'd extend through Sept. 6 rather than the end of August). The Senate also dropped a federal minimum wage increase from the legislation, but proponents say they'll reintroduce that at a later date.
How to watch President Biden's national address tonight.
House passes $1.9 trillion Covid relief bill, sends it to Biden to sign:
[...] Here are the proposal's major pieces:
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 12 2021, @10:53PM
7.5 trillion - over ten years.
And even that is a guesstimate, assuming that the people they want to go after have incompetent accountants and lawyers.
Maybe.
If they first dump fat pots of money at the IRS.
It would make way more sense to simplify the tax structure to remove loopholes and so on ... but that's also a mess because who depends vastly on those loopholes? The middle class.
It would make way more sense to ditch personal income tax entirely, structure it as a (much lower, yet net similar) payrol tax on businesses, vastly reduce the expense burden of the IRS, and stop hassling individuals.
But no ... that's not the narrative that the writer wants to produce. Rich people are eeeevil tax cheats. You know it, I know it, it feels right.