Legislation to Close Tax Breaks for Corporations Passes Senate

Bill aims to help protect critical services and help to fill the $1 billion budget shortfall created by Congressional Republicans’ budget 

DENVER, CO – Legislation to crack down on corporate tax loopholes to help fill the $1 billion budget shortfall created by Congressional Republicans’ budget passed the Senate today.

HB25B-1001, sponsored by Senators Nick Hinrichsen, D-Pueblo, and Lisa Cutter, D-Jefferson County, would limit tax breaks for higher-earning business owners by permanently decoupling from a federal tax giveaway.

“These corporate tax breaks show loud and clear that Trump and Congressional Republicans care more about helping their wealthy friends hoard more wealth than providing essential government services to hardworking Americans,” Hinrichsen said. “Legislation like HB25B-1001 will help us stop these corporate giveaways and continue life-saving food assistance and health care programs for Coloradans.”

“In 2021, the Colorado legislature took major strides toward reversing Trump’s corporate tax breaks in order to protect essential services for Coloradans who depend on them,” Cutter said. “This year, Trump and Congressional Republicans made those tax breaks permanent, so we're fighting to continue prioritizing the basic services that benefit hardworking Coloradans the most. With this bill, we’re permanently decoupling from these unfair tax breaks to ensure corporations pay their fair share to hardworking Coloradans.”

In 2017, President Trump passed tax cuts that allowed pass-through businesses, like S corporations and real estate investment trusts, to avoid paying taxes on up to 20 percent of qualified business income. In 2020, the Colorado legislature passed the “Tax Fairness Act”, decoupling from this federal tax cut by creating an add-back for this deduction for high-income business owners with an income over $500,000 per year for single filers or $1 million per year for joint filers.

The legislature extended the decoupling and add-back through 2025. HB25B-1001 would make Colorado’s decoupling permanent, responding to the action by Republicans in Congress to make the tax giveaway permanent at the federal level in H.R. 1.

HB25B-1001 now moves to the Governor’s desk for his signature. 

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Senate Approves Legislation to Close a Special Interest Corporate Tax Loophole