Skip to main content

Ivanka Trump pushes GOP tax plan, credits in Pennsylvania

White House adviser Ivanka Trump spoke in favor of the Republican effort to overhaul the nation's tax code system in Pennsylvania on Monday during a town hall event with U.S. Treasurer Jovita Carranza.
Trump has previously spoken out about economic issues, including the administration's paid family leave policy, but focused much of her remarks on Monday addressing the administration's proposal to expand the $1,000 child tax credit.
Details on just how much the credit should increase to have not been settled.
"We're advocating strongly for the expansion of the child tax credit, we think it's critically important to help offer American families much needed relief and prioritize what's right for their families," said Trump, the president's eldest daughter.
She added, "This tax credit enables a family to decide what is a right investment for them and their child. It's a very well-designed credit that will have a very big difference in the lives of families abut also can be unique to that individual family."
Trump said it was very important to make the credit refundable and that it was vital to recognize what the "modern American family looks like."
"Every parent has to manage the competing demands of raising a family and their passions, whether it be professional or otherwise, and I too had to manage that, but I'm far more fortunate than most and I had help. I wouldn't be able to do even a small fraction of what I was doing professionally or as a parent, just being so tired and overtasked, if I didn't have access to the means to be able to put myself my children in a secure and safe and protected and nurturing environment," she said.
She touted her father's tax blueprint as "squarely targeted at creating jobs for this country, creating growth for this country and offering relief to middle income families."
"It's time we recognize as a country that we have to have policies that mirror our values  -- work and family," said Trump, arguing that the tax reform plan does just that.
When asked if the administration's plan will in fact provide tax cuts to every American, Trump responded "absolutely."
"The president and the administration have repeatedly said the priority is middle income Americans ensuring that it has a positive additive effect for them but tax reform will impact everyone, simplification will impact everyone," said Trump.
She added that tax simplification "democratizes the tax code," adding that "everyone should be on a level playing field."
Trump's remarks follow that of President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence, who joined a conference call on Sunday with House Republicans, urging them to adopt the Senate-passed budget this week in order to speed up the process on tax reform.
"We are on the verge of doing something very, very historic," Mr. Trump said on the call, according to a GOP source.
Budget director Mick Mulvaney echoed the sense of urgency on CBS' "Face the Nation" on Sunday, saying that the Republican Party has "a lot of things we haven't followed through on," and that Mr. Trump has endured "great deal of frustration" as a result.
"We have to start keeping our promises. But passing this budget this week, which is the next step and an absolutely critical step to get tax reform, was a big step forward in keeping that promise," Mulvaney said.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Grace Jones says she was sexually harassed during casting for first big film

Musician, actress and model Grace Jones has revealed she was sexually harassed when she landed her first big acting role. Speaking to CNN's Christiane Amanpour on Thursday, Jones said the unnamed producer on the Ossie Davis-directed film asked her to bring her portfolio to his house so that he could make a final call on her casting. "He (the producer) poured some champagne, he was in his bathrobe and of course, took me to a room ... it was his bedroom," Jones said. "So with the champagne, even then at that young age ... I threw it in his face and walked out the door." The 69-year-old's account comes in the wake of multiple allegations of sexual harassment and assault in the entertainment industry. Dozens of women have accused Harvey Weinsten of sexual harassment and police are investigating assault claims. Weinstein has apologized for his behavior, but he denies all allegations of nonconsensual sex. Jones said that for alleged perpetrators of...

Las Vegas shooting victims struggle to afford mounting medical costs

Kurt Fowler and his wife, Trina, were celebrating their 18th wedding anniversary at a country music festival when the shooting started. Fowler, 41, knew he'd been hit in the ankle and couldn't run. He hid under the stage until the gunfire ended. "I knew my foot was completely useless," said Fowler, a firefighter from Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and a father of three. He underwent surgery, spent nearly two weeks in the hospital and still may need another operation. He also will need rehabilitation and follow-up visits with a specialist. Fowler has a Blue Cross Blue Shield PPO through his job, but he said he doesn't know how much he will have to pay out of his own pocket for the care he is receiving. In an era of higher deductibles and limited choice of in-network doctors, however, he knows he could face significant medical bills. His insurance card says his individual deductible is $5,000 and his coinsurance 20%. He said he didn't know how much his hea...

When Morley Safer played pool with Jackie Gleason

One of 60 Minutes' most classic scenes aired this week in 1984 — but it almost never happened. Morley Safer had just finished interviewing comedian-actor Jackie Gleason, the television powerhouse of the 1950s and 1960s who lives on in reruns of "The Honeymooners." The cameras were breaking down, and Gleason started to leave. But Safer had one more question, so the cameras rolled again. "Tell me something," Safer asked. "'The Great One.' Where did that come from?" "[That question] falls into the category of 'How We Tend to Overlook the Obvious,'" writes current 60 Minutes executive producer Jeff Fager in his new book,  Fifty Years of 60 Minutes: The Inside Story of Television's Most Influential News Broadcast . When the story aired on October 28, 1984, Fager writes, 60 Minutes creator and then-executive producer Don Hewitt said it was the best profile 60 Minutes had ever done. As Fager explains, producer Alan We...