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What do you call it when both candidates were against the sweeping 2017 tax bill in Congress, yet one now criticizes the other for wanting to get rid of parts of it? Let’s call it New Jersey. This spat involves the method with which either candidate in New Jersey’s 7th Congressional District would change the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, and whether one of them would get rid of the parts that people like. U.S. Rep. Leonard Lance, a Republican, says Democratic challenger Tom Malinowski wants to repeal the 2017 tax law, which despite some distasteful parts also includes vital tax incentives for distressed areas of New Jersey communities. Lance made the claim on Sept. 10, issuing a statement that while Malinowski speaks in glowing terms of ‘facilitating economic revitalization,’ he fails to tell voters he supports a full repeal of the 2017 tax law, which includes vital tax incentives to revitalize the city of Phillipsburg. Phillipsburg, with a riverfront corridor on the border with Pennsylvania that city officials have long wanted to improve, is among the communities hoping to benefit from an economic development provision in the tax law. Phillipsburg will benefit greatly from the Opportunity Zones law, town Council President Robert Fulper is quoted as saying in Lance’s statement. Malinowski, Fulper says in the statement, wants to throw the baby out with the bath water and eliminate a program that is truly doing good for our community. Does he? The campaign of Malinowski, a former assistant secretary of State for democracy, human rights and labor in President Barack Obama’s administration, says this is patently false. So what do Lance and his supporters base the claim on? New Jersey doesn’t love the entire law Before we get to the basis for the claim, it’s worth noting a bit of irony. Lance voted against this very piece of tax legislation, one of only 12 Republican House members to do so. At the time, he said he voted no because it significantly reduces the ability of New Jerseyans to deduct state and local taxes, a provision that has been in the code since 1913. This new cap on SALT, a popular acronym for the taxes, is making some homeowners angry in states with high real estate prices and high property taxes. In the past, they could deduct all their local property taxes from their incomes when figuring out their federal income tax obligation. Now, they can only deduct up to $10,000 for all state and local taxes, or $5,000 apiece if married but filing separately. Also, as a deficit hawk, I do not favor adding $1.5 trillion to the national debt, Lance said when voting no. Every House Democrat voted no, too, with many saying the tax cuts in the legislation tilted too heavily to wealthy Americans. But Lance was pleased with parts of the bill, nonetheless. These included a new preferential tax treatment on investment in economically distressed areas known as Opportunity Zones. As a result, New Jersey designated and the federal government in the spring approved 169 census tracts as Opportunity Zones. Despite Lance’s vote on the overall tax bill, he was an original cosponsor of an earlier measure to create Opportunity Zones, and it got folded into the final tax package. It is not unusual to oppose a multi-part bill while liking some components. But if Congress were to repeal the entire tax package now, the Opportunity Zone program, important to New Jersey communities, could end, Lance says. Yet he claimed in his Sept. 10 statement that his challenger would do just that: repeal the entire bill. Leonard isn't advocating for the repeal of the tax bill (and therefore opportunity zones), Lance’s campaign manager, Jim Hilk, told us in an email. Tom Malinowski is. One set of quotes Asked for support for that claim, Hilk sent PolitiFact three pieces of information. One was to a tweet from the Communications Workers of America, or CWA, New Jersey organization, posted from the union’s leadership conference in July. The tweet quoted Malinowski saying, I want to be part of a majority that will fight for workers, for a $15/hr minimum wage, and will fight to repeal the GOP tax law. I want to be part of a majority that will fight for workers, for a $15/hr minimum wage, and will fight to repeal the GOP tax law. NJ-07 candidate Tom @Malinowski addresses the CWA Leadership Conference on his vision to fight for working families in Congress. pic.twitter.com/mjPAys9yHF — CWA New Jersey (@CWA_NJ) July 10, 2018 Another link was to a statement issued by Malinowski’s campaign on Aug. 24. In it, the Democrat said, In New Jersey we’ve chosen to invest in the things that matter to us, like good schools and affordable healthcare, and Congressional Republicans designed their tax bill to hurt us for making those choices. The only way to repeal that tax bill and restore the SALT deduction is to replace the Republican majority in the Congress. Note the word repeal, Lance’s campaign points out. The third link was to a story in Insider NJ , a website that covers political news. The story was on the opening of Malinowski’s campaign headquarters in May and noted that he was surrounded by well-wishers including U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone, a Democrat from New Jersey’s 6th Congressional District. At the office opening, Malinowski said he would fight back Republican efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act. He said he would fight to preserve Social Security and Medicare. And he said, according to the article, Congressman Pallone, I will fight to repeal that tax bill. The other quotes Malinowski’s campaign says it can’t account for what others may have reported or tweeted, including what may have been partial quotes or quotes lacking a fuller context. Campaign spokesman Benji Schwartz noted a number of instances in which Malinowski said clearly that he wants to get rid of parts of the tax bill but make sure other parts, including Opportunity Zone provisions, stay or get replaced. In a joint April 13 appearance on New Jersey Public Media with two other Democrats running in the June primary, Malinowski said his experience in government made him the right candidate to deal with the tax bill that needs to be repealed and replaced in the interest of the people in our state. NJ7 Forward , a progressive coalition, quoted Malinowski in its own description of the tax bill: I will work to repeal the Republican tax bill and replace it with tax reform that simplifies and lowers rates for everyone, that cuts special interest loopholes rather than deductions that help the middle class. In another pre-primary piece, NJ Spotlight, which covers political and public policy news and analysis, presented various positions of the Democratic candidates. The story said Malinowski wants to repeal the tax bill and replace it with ‘more fiscally responsible tax reform’ legislation that lowers rates, cuts special interest loopholes and ‘doesn’t explode national debt.’ On July 18, Malinowski used Twitter to link to a Bloomberg Opinion piece criticizing the tax cuts. Malinowski wrote his own opinion in the tweet: Repeal and Replace. Repeal and Replace. https://t.co/NsSGcqxvsI via @bopinion — Tom Malinowski (@Malinowski) July 18, 2018 On his campaign website , Malinowski used those words again: repeal and replace. I will work to repeal the GOP tax law and replace it with fiscally responsible tax reform, he says in a section dedicated to issues. New tax legislation must preserve middle class tax deductions like the State and Local Tax deduction (SALT), which prevented us from being double-taxed on our state payments, close corporate and special interest loopholes, bring home money stashed in foreign tax shelters, and avoid ballooning the deficit. Our ruling Lance says his opponent wants to repeal the entire Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. It is true that there was a tweet, a news story and a candidate statement in which the word repeal appeared without the addition of replace. Malinowski’s spokesman said that in the single instance in which Lance linked the word repeal directly to his opponent, and not to a third party’s characterization, it was when Malinowski was talking solely about the SALT deduction. Malinowski wants to get the full SALT deduction back. Replacing it would make no sense, the spokesman said. That may be. But Malinowski has used the word repeal and been described by others including the CWA in New Jersey, which endorsed him, as supporting repeal. He and Lance disagree on other portions of the tax bill, but they both say they want to keep the Opportunity Zone tax incentives. Perhaps eventually there will be legislation that one of them -- the winner in November -- can vote on. Until then, there are words, and Lance was able to point to the word repeal several times. That doesn't mean he is totally correct on his opponent's intentions, however. For these reasons, we rate Lance’s claim Half True. Share the Facts 2018-09-21 13:17:00 UTC PolitiFact 4 1 7 PolitiFact Rating: Half True Democratic congressional candidate Tom Malinowski supports a full repeal of the 2017 tax law, which includes vital tax incentives for New Jersey communities. Leonard Lance Congressman, New Jersey's 7th Congressional District https://www.lanceforcongress.com/news/2018-09-10/warren-county-elected-officials-malinowskis-reckless-repeal-plan-jeopardizes-tax-inc In a campaign statement Monday, September 10, 2018 2018-09-10 Read More info
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