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Blue States Appeal Limit on Deductions for State, Local Taxes

Four blue states that lost their legal fight to overturn the new $10,000 limit on the federal deduct..

Four blue states that lost their legal fight to overturn the new $10,000 limit on the federal deduction for state and local taxes—the so-called SALT deduction—filed an appeal Nov. 26 with the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals.

New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Maryland sued U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin and the IRS in July 2018 after the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, a tax reform law that was backed by President Donald Trump, took effect.

The law lowered tax rates, broadened the standard deduction and child tax credit, and limited the alternative minimum tax and various popular deductions, including the SALT deduction, which was previously unlimited. Most Americans received a net tax cut.

Limiting the SALT deduction may have been unpopular in some quarters—New York Governor Andrew Cuomo called it “economic civil war”—but economists say the move supports economic growth because it puts pressure on high-tax states, such as those participating in this lawsuit, to lower their tax rates.

The lawsuit itself is premised on a conspiracy theory. The unproven theory is “that the SALT cap is a politically motivated bid to effectively raise property taxes in predominately Democratic states,” said a statement issued by Cuomo and New York Attorney General Letitia James, both Democrats.

“This cap has already put a heavy burden on the hard-working, middle-class families of New York, and, in the years ahead, it is expected to cost New Yorks taxpayers over $100 billion, which is why we will fight this senseless and unconstitutional law,” James said. “New York will not be bullied into paying more in taxes or changing its vital public investments because of Congress and the presidents partisan choices.”

In the lawsuit, the states claimed the ceiling on the SALT deduction was “an unconstitutional assault on states sovereign choices.”

Judge J. Paul Oetken of the U.S. District Court in Manhattan, who was appointed by then-President Barack Obama, rejected the states argument when he dismissed the lawsuit in a 37-page opinion Sept. 30 in the case cited as State of New York v. Mnuchin.

Oetken ruled the states failed to prove the SALT cap was “unconstitutionally coercive” or infringed on “their own sovereign tax powers.” The federal government enjoys an “exhaustive” power to levy and collect income taxes, while “states remain free to exercise their tax power however they wish.”

Just because it hits taxpayers in some states harder than others doesnt mean the tax law is unconstitutional, the judge wrote.

Congress enacted the SALT cap under “its broad tax powers under Article I, section 8 and the Sixteenth Amendment,” Oetken wrote. “The cap, like any federal tax provision, will affect some taxpayers more than others and, by extension, will affect some states more tRead More – Source

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