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Lifelong climate radical RFK Jr. is no friend of the right
RFK Jr. does promote some limited government, anti-establishment policies that conservatives and libertarians strongly support, but his leftist proposals far outweigh them.
Sen. Josh Hawley wants to give parents direct monthly payments for having kids
U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) rolled out a proposal on Monday for a new welfare program for parents, to give them direct monthly payments for having children and raising a family.
Hawley's "Parent Tax Credit" proposal would create a new fully refundable $6,000 tax credit for single parents and $12,000 tax credit for married parents with children who qualify. Parents would receive direct, automatic payments from the government in advance of filing their taxes each year. The plan is designed to make benefits accessible for households with only one working parent when the other parent opts to stay home with their children.
"Starting a family and raising children should not be a privilege only reserved for the wealthy. Millions of working people want to start a family and would like to care for their children at home, but current policies do not respect these preferences," Hawley said in a statement. "American families should be supported, no matter how they choose to care for their kids."
To qualify for the tax credit, a single parent or married parents filing taxes jointly must report a minimum earnings of $7,540 annually, or 20 hours of work per week at the federal minimum wage. This policy creates a "marriage bonus," because married parents can work together to meet the minimum earnings requirement.
Payments to families would be advanced by the Internal Revenue Service monthly, or if a family opts out of monthly payments, they would be eligible to receive a lump-sum return when they file federal taxes. There is no income phase-out, meaning every American would be eligible for the program, no matter how wealthy they are.
Hawley released his plan just ahead of President Joe Biden's impending announcement of an estimated $1.8 trillion spending and tax plan for American families.
The president will address a joint session of Congress on Wednesday and is expected to call for billions in spending on national child care, prekindergarten, paid family leave, and free community college, according to the Washington Post. Many of these policies are designed to make good on campaign promises and will be funded by raising taxes on wealthy Americans and investors.
Biden's plan will reportedly ask for a $200 billion increase in health insurance subsidies for Obamacare; $300 billion in education funding, including for tuition-free college; $225 billion for child-care funding; $225 billion for paid family and medical leave; $200 billion for pre-school funding; and a $400 billion extension of the child tax credit through 2025.
Benefits from the child tax credit were already increased for one year under President Biden as part of the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill passed in March. Families eligible for the tax credit can receive $3,600 for each child up to age six and $3,000 for children ages seven to 17.
But some Republicans think Democrats are not doing enough to send direct payments to American families.
Hawley on Saturday criticized Biden's proposal, teasing the plan he introduced Monday.
We need a plan to help working parents that is pro-family and pro-work. I’ll be proposing legislation this coming w… https://t.co/mfo0dKZxeU— Josh Hawley (@Josh Hawley)1619311475.0
In February, Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) introduced his own proposal to give parents of young children monthly $350 payments in perpetuity. Romney's plan was estimated to cost $254 billion. He proposed a series of changes to the tax code and the elimination of several tax deductions to offset the additional spending in his plan.
Hawley has not released an estimated cost for his plan or a proposal of how to pay for it.
Sen. Mitt Romney proposes $350 per child monthly payments to families
Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) will introduce a plan to create a new welfare program Thursday, granting parents of young children $350 per child every month in perpetuity — not just during the coronavirus pandemic.
Romney announced his proposal, called the Family Security Act, in a news release that touted the program as "a new national commitment to American families by modernizing antiquated federal policies into a monthly cash benefit."
"American families are facing greater financial strain, worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic, and marriage and birth rates are at an all-time low," Sen. Romney said. "On top of that, we have not comprehensively reformed our family support system in nearly three decades, and our changing economy has left millions of families behind. Now is the time to renew our commitment to families to help them meet the challenges they face as they take on most important work any of us will ever do — raising our society's children. This proposal offers a path toward greater security for America's families by consolidating the many complicated programs to create a monthly cash benefit for them, without adding to the deficit."
Romney's plan calls for the Child Tax Credit to be abolished and replaced with a flat monthly government payment of $350 per child to families with children ages 0 to 5 and $250 per month for children ages 6 to 17. The program is available for every child with a valid Social Security number as well as expecting parents within four months of their child's due date, according to a fact-sheet on Romney's policy from the Niskanen Center.
The maximum monthly payment to families would be capped at $1,250 per family, and to ensure the policy doesn't benefit the rich, for every $1,000 above $200,000 income for single tax filers and $400,000 for joint filers, the payments would decrease by $50 until phasing out to zero.
Romney's office claimed his proposal could lift nearly 3 million children out of poverty, encourage people to marry and have children, and do so without increasing the federal budget deficit.
Under current policies, the Child Tax Credit and the Earned Income Tax Credit cost the federal government $188 billion. Under Romney's proposal, that spending would increase to $254 billion.
To offset the additional spending, Romney proposes eliminating the Head-of-Household tax filing status, eliminating the Child and Dependent Care tax credit, abolishing Temporary Assistance to Needy Families benefits, and repealing the State and Local Tax deduction in the tax code. These programs, Romney's office said, are duplicative and redundant and families will receive more benefits from a flat check than from tax loopholes they may lose access to if their income goes up.
While Democrats generally support expanding welfare programs and government payments to families, they are not likely to support Romney's plan because of the provisions eliminating tax credits they favor.
As part of the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package proposed by President Joe Biden, Democrats want to boost the child tax credit from $2,000 to $3,600 and make it "fully refundable," ensuring that parents who don't owe taxes still receive a payment from the government. The Democrats also want the Internal Revenue Service distribute the child tax credit refunds in advance every month, essentially creating a monthly government payment to families distributed by the IRS by manipulating the tax code.
Romney's proposal differs in that the Social Security Administration would distribute the payments, and the law would recognize these payments for what they are: Welfare checks for families, rather than tax loopholes. His plan also would provide $4,200 for families with young children, rather than $3,600. And where Biden's proposal is deficit-financed, the offsets supported by Romney would pay for his plan through 2025.
The Family Security Act is endorsed by the Niskanen Center, as well as the Universal Income Project and UBI Center.
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