A House member is continuing his fight to kill the 3.8% net investment income tax now imposed on some people's investment gains.
Rep. Bruce Westerman, R-Ark., kept the net investment income tax repeal provision in the new version of his Fair Care Act bill.
Westerman introduced the bill Dec. 12. At press time, Congress.gov had not yet posted the bill text, but a copy provided by Westerman's office was similar to earlier versions of the bill and included a similar net investment income tax repeal bill.
Westerman serves on the House Republican Study Committee, a group that helps shape policy for Republicans in Congress who take a conservative approach to policymaking. Westerman's views and Republican Study Committee proposals may become more influential during the 119th Congress, which starts Jan. 3, and after President-elect Donald Trump takes office.
What it means: Big federal budget deficits may create pressure on Congress to keep the net investment income tax in place, or even increase it, but some in Congress still hope to eliminate it.
If opponents had already eliminated the tax, that would have saved taxpayers about $49 billion this year, or about 2% of total individual federal income tax payments, according to Congressional Budget Office federal revenue data.
The Fair Care Act bill: Westerman's bill includes dozens of health care and health insurance provisions with strong, relatively broad, bipartisan support, such as a provision that would continue to forbid health insurers from considering applicants' health problems when selling and pricing coverage.
Another provision would make Affordable Care Act premium tax credit subsidies available to people with income up to 600% of the federal poverty limit.