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Wisconsin Assembly set to pass $2 billion tax cut package. But will Evers sign it?

State of the State Wisconsin
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MADISON (AP) — Wisconsin Republicans who control the state Assembly were expected Tuesday to pass their third attempt at a major tax cut this session.

The Assembly was scheduled to take up the legislation during a floor session Tuesday afternoon. Approval would send the legislation to the state Senate.

Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu supports the $2 billion plan, but it's unclear where Democratic Gov. Tony Evers stands on it. Evers used his partial veto powers in July to reduce a $3.5 billion income tax cut that Republicans inserted into the state budget to just $175 million, which translated to a $3 per month reduction for the average taxpayer. And he vetoed a GOP tax cut plan in November that mirrored the one Republicans are advancing now.

The governor has said the past Republican plans didn't do enough to help the middle class. But he hasn't said whether he'll reject this latest attempt, noting only that he's always looking for ways to make the tax system more fair.

Rather than packaging their latest plan in a single omnibus bill like in November, Republicans divided their it into multiple bills in the hopes that Evers might see his way to signing some of them, if not all.

If Evers vetoes any of the bills, he would risk handing Republicans campaign talking points this summer. GOP incumbents could boast that they tried multiple times to deliver tax relief, but the governor blocked them.

One bill would expand the state's second income tax bracket to cover higher earners. Currently, single filers who make between $14,320 and $28,640 and married joint filers who make between $19,090 to $38,190 fall in the second bracket. That means they face a 4.4% tax rate. Single filers who make between $28,640 and $315,000 and married couples who make between $38,190 and $420,420 are in the 5.3% third bracket.

The legislation would expand the second bracket to include single filers who make between $14,320 and $112,500 and married joint filers who make between $19,090 and $150,000. The change would result in income tax savings of nearly $795 million in fiscal year 2024-2025 and about $750 million annually thereafter, according to the Legislative Fiscal Bureau.

Another bill would increase the income tax credit for married couples from a maximum of $480 to $870 beginning in tax year 2024.

A third bill would expand the state's child care tax credit to 100% of the claimants' federal child care tax credit. Currently, filers can claim only 50% of the federal credit on their state tax returns. The amount of maximum eligible expenses under the state credit would grow from $3,000 to $10,000 for one qualifying dependent and from $6,000 to $20,000 for two or more dependents.

The last bill would update state income tax withholding tables from tax year 2022 to 2024, including the second bracket expansion. The move would reduce state income tax collections by $439 million in fiscal year 2024-25.

All in all, the bills would cost the state about $2 billion in lost tax revenue in 2024-2025 and about $1.4 billion each year thereafter, according to the fiscal bureau.