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LaLota Votes Against SALT-less Tax Bill and Gains Support for Bill to Eliminate Marriage Penalty

January 31, 2024

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, Rep. Nick LaLota (R-Suffolk County, NY) released a statement after voting NO on the Wyden-Smith tax bill because it failed to include an increase of the State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction. LaLota also introduced H.R. 7160, the SALT Marriage Penalty Elimination Act. The bill would raise the SALT deduction cap to $20,000 for only joint filers and cap adjusted gross income at $500,000. Reps. Mike Lawler (R-NY), Andrew Garbarino (R-NY), Anthony D’Esposito (R-NY), Marc Molinaro (R-NY), Andy Harris (R-MD), Mike Garcia (R-CA), and Young Kim (R-CA) joined LaLota in introducing this legislation.

“For months, I promised Long Islanders I would vote against the Wyden-Smith tax package if it did not have a reasonable increase in the SALT deduction cap.  Tonight I kept my promise by voting against the SALT-less Wyden-Smith tax bill,” said LaLota.  “But our fight is not over.  And while even getting a vote on increasing the SALT deduction seemed like an impossibility several weeks ago, I am thankful that my party’s leadership has agreed to expedite a vote on the SALT Marriage Penalty Elimination Act as early as next week.  Finally, representatives from New York to California and Texas to North Dakota will be able to weigh in on this important issue.  Then, I hope my colleagues from both sides of the aisle who have campaigned on being pro-family and for lower taxes join me in supporting the SALT Marriage Penalty Elimination Act.”

Background: 

Since being sworn into office in January 2023, LaLota has been explicitly clear on his support(link is external) for restoring the SALT deduction. LaLota joined the bipartisan SALT Caucus and introduced the SALT Fairness and Deficit Reduction Act to effectively bring the deduction to pre-2017 levels for the overwhelming majority of taxpayers while at the same time reducing the federal deficit by raising and extending the SALT deduction cap to $60k for single filers and $120k for joint filers beginning in 2023 and lasting until December 31, 2032.

The Hill(link is external) - New York GOP Moderates, Leaders Get SALT Agreement After Floor Protest

Fox News(link is external) - Blue-State Republicans Score Commitment from Johnson on SALT Vote After House Floor Protest

The Messenger(link is external) - Moderate House Republicans Dismiss ‘Civil War’ Border Rhetoric as ‘Inappropriate’

The Hill(link is external) - GOP Moderates Send Warning Shot to Johnson Over Tax Deal

Bloomberg(link is external) - New York House Republicans Threaten to Deny Tax Deal Over SALT

Fox News(link is external) - Speaker Johnson Faces New GOP Rebellion, This Time From Moderates

The Messenger(link is external) - New York Republicans Borrow Hardline Tactics to Protest Tax Bill

Denver Gazette(link is external) - SALT in the Wound: New York Republicans Stage House Floor Revolt Over Tax Deal

Roll Call(link is external)- House GOP Weighs Sidecar Tax Deal on ‘SALT,’ Child Credit

NY 1(link is external) - N.Y. Republicans Stall House Vote Amid Demand for SALT Relief in Tax Package

News 12(link is external)- Three Long Island GOP Congressmen Call to Make Changes to Cap on SALT Deductions

Roll Call(link is external)- ‘SALTy’ House Republicans Nearly Sink Rule Over Tax Deal

Newsmax(link is external) - House Moderates Spar with Johnson Over SALT Deductions

Finger Lakes 1(link is external) - NY Republicans Push for SALT Relief in Tax Package, Temporarily Stalling Procedural Vote

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Issues:Congress