[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 153 (2007), Part 23]
[Senate]
[Pages 31870-31872]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                        ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX

  Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I rise today to discuss the pending crisis 
of the American taxpayer. The cause of this crisis is the failure of 
Congress to deal honestly with the alternative minimum tax, or AMT.
  Debate over what to do about the AMT has become a yearly ritual on 
Capitol Hill. As a member of the Finance Committee, I fully understand 
this ritual. But this year, we are dragging our feet, and the more we 
delay, the more likely it is that millions of Americans will get socked 
with an unexpected tax bill next year and millions more will have their 
refunds delayed.
  Now it appears we are not going to address the AMT until December. 
Failure to address the AMT promptly on our return will be a pretty 
terrible Christmas surprise for the families impacted by congressional 
ineptitude, but it will certainly be a surprise they will never forget. 
I can see it now: Surprise, you need to write a check for $3,000 to the 
IRS by April 15. That is right up there with: Surprise, you have been 
served. Yet Congress delays. Congress fiddles. This is grossly 
irresponsible.
  According to Secretary Paulson and the Department of the Treasury, 
unless we fix the AMT, 25 million taxpayers will be subject to it in 
2007. That is 21 million more than in 2006. And 25 million other 
taxpayers will face delays in the processing of their returns and 
receiving of refunds. In my home State of Utah, the Joint Tax Committee 
estimates we will jump from 19,000 AMT filers to 150,000 AMT filers. 
This is simply unacceptable.
  Most of the taxpayers who are at risk have not planned for the 
eventuality of AMT liability. After all, year after year, like 
clockwork, the Republicans controlled Congress and they passed AMT 
relief. We are already too late to avoid some problems. The IRS warned 
Congress that unless we fixed the AMT by early November, there would be 
serious delays in the processing of tax returns. We are now pushing 
toward Thanksgiving. Secretary Paulson has made clear that based on 
historical filing patterns, enactment of an AMT fix in mid to late 
December could delay issuance of approximately $75 billion in refunds--
that is with a ``b,'' a billion dollars, 75 of them. That is 25 million 
tax refunds delayed.
  It is always a bad idea for Members of Congress to get between their 
constituents and their tax refunds. Yet here we are. How did we come to 
this particular pass? The story of the AMT should be a case study for 
limited Government. Give Congress long enough, and it will find a way 
to mess things up.
  In 1969, the press reported that 155 high-income Americans paid no 
Federal income taxes in 1966. That was found out in 1969. Congress came 
to the rescue, creating an alternative minimum tax that would make sure 
all Americans paid their fair share. The AMT would prevent tax 
avoidance by disallowing certain credits and deductions. As if it is 
not bad enough figuring out one tax system, now many Americans would 
have to complete their tax a second way--once under the traditional 
income tax and once under the alternative minimum tax. And naturally 
the tax that gets paid is the one which is highest.
  Still, this AMT was originally meant to apply to a small number of 
filers--155. That is 155 out of almost 300 million people. Today, it is 
a menace threatening millions of Americans. Absent changes, estimates 
show that by 2010, nearly 89 percent of all married couples, with two 
children, earning between $75,000 and $100,000 will be hit by the AMT. 
Make no mistake about it, elected officials are responsible for that 
train wreck--and, I might say, on both sides of the aisle.
  In 1986, Congress failed to index the AMT exemption for inflation.
  In 1993, a Democratic Congress and President Clinton took us a bit 
further down the road toward this fiscal debacle. They raised the 24-
percent rate on the first $175,000 of the alternative minimum tax. They 
raised that taxable income to 26 percent. The rate on income in excess 
of $175,000 was raised to 28 percent.
  Republicans in Congress attempted to right the ship. In 1999, we 
passed a provision repealing the AMT in its entirety. Done. Finito. 
Vaya con dios, AMT. Had President Clinton signed this bill, we would 
not be having this debate today. Millions of Americans would not be 
staring down the barrel of an unfair and unplanned-for tax hike. But we 
all know how this story ended. President Clinton vetoed the bill. This 
was the coup de grace. And so the AMT would continue to haunt us, 
growing bigger and more destructive every year since then.
  The tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 only further emphasized the 
insidiousness of the AMT. These tax cuts promised tax relief to middle-
class families and economic growth. Yet, as the economy grew and income 
rose, more and more middle-class families fell into the AMT trap. 
Economic growth, income growth, tax cuts, and a failure to index the 
AMT for inflation created one costly cocktail for millions of families.
  So there you have it. Congress manages to take a tax designed to 
target a handful of super-rich tax avoiders--155 people--and 40 years 
later, millions of middle-class families are being hit by that tax.
  For what it is worth, this experience should give pause to any 
American who wants to hand management of the Nation's health care 
system over to the good people on Capitol Hill--us good people on 
Capitol Hill. Nonetheless, since 2001, Congress has patched the AMT. In 
layman's terms, on a yearly basis we have increased the AMT exemption. 
The result is that fewer Americans have an AMT liability greater than 
their liability under the ordinary income tax. These patches have done 
the trick. They have prevented the AMT from hitting even more families. 
Republicans dutifully passed that patch as sure as the sun rising in 
the morning.
  Now, don't get me wrong, a yearly patch is no substitute for what we 
tried to do during the Clinton years, and that was to completely repeal 
the AMT, which I have been advocating for many years. Only complete 
repeal will remove the uncertainty faced by millions of Americans with 
potential AMT liability. And as is on full display this year, that 
uncertainty is growing.
  The problem now is the insistence by my colleagues on the other side 
that we follow the so-called pay-go rules. Under a Democratic Congress, 
any tax cuts must be paid for. Now, let me translate that for you. This 
Democratic Congress is going to raise your taxes, and to pay for the 
AMT, a Democratic Congress is going to have to raise a lot of your 
taxes. Under pay-go rules, if Congress passes a provision that reduces 
revenues to the Treasury, it must make up the balance from somewhere 
else. This is true even if the provision does not cut taxes but merely 
prevents a tax increase from hitting middle-class American families.
  The Democratic Congress is proud of these rules. These rules 
supposedly demonstrate a commitment to fiscal responsibility. But, as 
some wags have suggested, the Democrats misnamed their rule. It should 
be more accurately called tax-go, not what it has been--pay-go. You 
see, in the hands of a Democratic Congress, the way to balance the 
books after a tax cut is never to cut spending; it is always to raise 
taxes. You have to love the logic. We are going to cut taxes by raising 
taxes. This is a public policy of robbing Peter to pay Paul.
  Now, you don't have to take my word for it. This is what Congressman 
Tim Mahoney, a Florida Democrat, had to say:

       You want to reward people for taking risks. How about 
     budget cuts to make government more efficient? We need to 
     show people we are good managers and stewards of their money. 
     I've been here 10 months and I haven't seen one proposal to 
     cut spending.

  Now, I think that about hits the mark, and that is a Democrat 
speaking about Democrat rule in the House of Representatives and the 
Senate.
  Now, for the Democrats--most of them--fiscal responsibility means one 
thing: raising your taxes. They have a

[[Page 31871]]

one-page playbook, and with the AMT fix passed by the House last week, 
they ran that play right down the throats of the American people. 
Touchdown, Democrats. Unfortunately, the American people are the big 
losers here. A 1-year patch for the alternative minimum tax costs $50 
billion. For 2 years, we will need to come up with $135 billion. 
Permanent repeal of the alternative minimum tax will now cost us $872 
billion.
  Oh, if we had just had President Clinton sign into law the repeal of 
AMT that we passed through both Houses of Congress back then. But let's 
just start with the 1-year patch.
  In order to pay for this $50 billion 1-year patch--or a tax increase, 
in other words--the House had to come up with $50 billion in tax 
increases. One of the most talked about tax hikes in that bill involves 
treating carried-interest income, currently taxed as capital gains, as 
ordinary income. This is an old-school soak-the-rich play, honed before 
the adoption of the forward pass. I think for this one the Democrats 
pulled out FDR's playbook. Go after private equity managers, raise 
taxes on the 50,000 people nationwide earning carried interest, and 
keep taxes level for the 23 million people whose financial security is 
jeopardized by AMT. Never mind the fact that this could create perverse 
disincentives for one of the engines of our current economic growth. 
Never mind that it would reduce risk-taking in venture capital firms 
and real estate partnerships and other entities that create jobs and 
economic growth. Never mind the fact we are paying for a 1-year AMT tax 
by permanently raising taxes--your taxes. No, what is really pathetic 
about this proposal is that the Democrats who support this want to 
permanently raise taxes to pay for revenue we never thought we would 
have in the first place. People, this is phantom revenue. We were never 
going to collect this money. We never wanted to collect this money. But 
with a twisted sense of fiscal responsibility, we are now going down 
the road of permanently increasing taxes to make 1-year offsets on 
money we never thought we would have. And that is because we are 
unwilling to cut spending in this Congress today. Now, this is some 
seriously warped tax policy.
  The House majority leader sees these misguided tax hikes as a model 
of virtuous statesmanship--``Raising revenues takes political 
courage.'' If that is true, then the House Democrats are the Spartans 
of tax hikes. In the end, I doubt we will raise taxes to pay for AMT 
relief. I certainly hope we will not do that.
  I understand why the Democrats feel the need to blame someone else 
for this problem. While Americans everywhere could be hit by the AMT, 
it really is the high-tech States--represented primarily by Democrats--
that will suffer the most if Congress fails to act. All States will 
suffer, but the ones that will suffer the most are the blue States. 
Taxpayers in California, Connecticut, Maryland, New Jersey, and New 
York filed 44.2 percent of all AMT returns last year, and I think that 
figures in it a lot.
  This disparity is only growing. If Congress does not fix this 
problem, in States such as Connecticut, Maryland, and New Jersey, 
nearly 25 percent of current filers will be forced into paying the 
alternative minimum tax. Absent alternative minimum tax relief, New 
York would have 1 million additional AMT tax filers this year compared 
to last year--1 million more. In California, the number of new AMT 
filers would increase by 1.7 million.
  I don't mind these Robin Hood-like approaches to blue States, if that 
is what they want to do by electing people who do this to them. I think 
they have a right to do that. But I will bet money that they do not 
want that type of thing to happen to them.
  These individuals and families, who are going to now be sucked into 
the AMT tax, never thought they would be subjected to the AMT and so 
they did not withhold accordingly. The worst case scenario, then, is 
that they will actually have to cut checks for thousands of dollars 
come April.
  Let's not forget the 25 million lower income taxpayers who are facing 
long delays in getting their refunds because of the slowness of the 
Congress and the inability of Congress to get this done. This would be 
devastating, it will be devastating, unless we can change this. Yet we 
continue to dither. The answer is easy: Repeal it, just do it, get rid 
of it already. But Democrats do not seem to be inclined to do the 
sensible thing. They want to let the AMT linger and fester.
  Year after year, repeal will become even more expensive and the 
Democrats, armed with their pay-go rules, will have to find a way to 
balance the books when they do repeal it.
  What do they propose? How will they offset the nearly $1 trillion 
that AMT repeal or reform will cost? If you look closely enough, you 
can just make it out on the horizon--the mother lode, the mother ship, 
the mother of all tax reforms, according to my dear friend over in the 
House, the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. We are close 
friends but, boy, he called it right, the mother of all tax reforms.
  AMT relief is at the center of the central Democratic proposal for 
tax reform. While this tax reform is going nowhere right now, make no 
mistake about it, this is what we have to look forward to, from a 
Democratic Congress and White House.
  My friend from New York, the chairman of the Ways and Means 
Committee, has a way of getting what he wants. He is smart--I think he 
is brilliant, personally--he is persistent, and he knows how to cut a 
deal. I know. I have worked with him on a number of things. I have 
great admiration for him. And this mother of all tax reforms is his 
baby. But as much as I love my friend Congressman Rangel, this is one 
ugly mother.
  This mother is not friendly or funny like Lucille Ball. She is a bit 
creepy, as a matter of fact, as you can see. Actually, she is a bit 
scary. That is frightening. At times, she is downright unstable. This 
may be hard to see on the television cameras here, but she looks pretty 
unstable to me. And she is coming to get the middle class.
  This mother promises to get rid of the onerous AMT. By repealing AMT, 
mother claims she will provide tax relief to millions of middle-class 
families. But mother is really only out for mother. Of course, that 
relief is not real relief, since we never intended those families to 
pay the AMT in the first place. Calling this tax relief is like someone 
getting ready to hit you in the head with a hammer, deciding not to hit 
you, and then telling you that he is doing you a favor.
  What she gives with one hand, this mother takes away with the other, 
by assuming the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, so essential to our economic 
growth, will expire.
  The mother ship already comes fully loaded with the largest tax 
increase in history. Allowing the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts to expire 
would dwarf even that.
  This is not a recipe for happy taxpayers, this is bitter and 
unnecessary medicine. The majority of Democrats in the Congress seem 
prepared to make the American taxpayer take the dose. You can see, it 
is not very tasty.
  We do not need to go down this track. To borrow from an old movie, we 
should ``Throw Momma''--this mama--``From The Train.'' It would be a 
real mistake to continue the practice of paying for fake, temporary tax 
cuts with real and permanent tax hikes.
  Contrary to the assertions of some of my colleagues on the other side 
of the aisle, the only responsible and the only realistic action we can 
take is to repeal the AMT in its entirety right now. We should do so 
without raising taxes.
  We are going to have a debate in the next few years over fundamental 
tax reform and we are going to have debates over fundamental health 
care reform. We should do so without the specter of the AMT hanging 
over this Chamber.
  I urge my colleagues to repeal it in its entirety, right now, without 
raising taxes. You cannot be fiscally responsible without being 
fiscally honest. This phantom income should play no part in broader 
debates over tax reform. At the very least, we should not pass 
permanent tax hikes that would have ugly economic ramifications in

[[Page 31872]]

order to pay for 1 year of AMT relief. We are putting off disaster 1 
more year by doing that, at a cost of $50 billion in tax increases.
  There are some ways we can do this. There are no good ways we can do 
this. But I know one thing, the worst way is to do it by increasing 
taxes to pay for it, and stifling the economy that has enough on its 
plate with the high cost of energy, to mention one item.
  To go to approximately 24 million people from 155 people is more than 
absurd. That is where we are going. If we take this mother of all tax 
reforms seriously, and if we were able to pass that--and I hope we are 
not--I have to say there is going to be a great increase in taxes, a 
great stifling of the economy, and much more difficulty for this 
country in the coming years.
  One reason I am giving these remarks is I know there are people on 
the Democratic side who do not like this, who are responsible and who 
do want to do what is right, who basically know there are no good 
options here. Raising taxes is one of the worst options we can do. I 
appeal to them to stand up now and not let this happen because if it 
does, this economy is going to pay a tremendous price. I think in the 
end, as bad as it will be no matter what we do, there are better ways 
of doing this than increasing taxes, doing it the way that has been 
suggested.
  Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I be 
allowed to speak as in morning business.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.

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