February 28, 2025.
How much will we have to pay the ultra-wealthy? The House of Representatives passed a budget resolution on February 26 that would pay out $4.5 trillion in tax breaks over a decade, with the largest share going to the wealthiest. Who would pay for that? We do – in lost or more expensive health coverage, lost nutrition assistance, higher state taxes or reduced state services, and more costly student loans. But as steep as these costs are, that’s not all we’ll pay. If the Trump/Musk autocracy succeeds, we will pay in exorbitant bank and credit card fees, in lower wages because discrimination is unchecked, and in more sickness and injury from poorly regulated medicines, medical devices, and pollution, as federal protectors are decimated. All of those losses for most of us pay directly into higher profits and lower costs for corporations. You can send a message to Congress opposing cuts to health care and nutrition to pay for tax cut for the rich – just click here.
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This year, the richest one-tenth of one percent, with net worth of over $22 million each, gained $252,300 from the Trump tax breaks enacted in 2017, and that the House just voted to extend for another decade.
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That’s the 10-year cost of extending the 2017 tax breaks for the richest 1 percent. Who pays? It’s also the amount the House budget would cut from Medicaid and SNAP nutrition funds.
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The House budget resolution would require at least $880 billion over 10 years to be cut from programs including Medicaid, Medicare, and the Affordable Care Act.
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The huge health care cuts assumed the House budget would punish millions of people. One possible cut would eliminate the extra payments the federal government now makes to cover more working adults in Medicaid; eliminating those payments would cut $560 billion. If states did not pick up the cost, 21 million people would lose Medicaid.
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