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Lawmakers remove ‘revenge’ tax provision from Trump's big bill after Treasury Department request

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent talks to reporters about his lunch meeting with Republican senators and the schedule for getting the Republican megabill to President Donald Trump's desk by July 4, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, June 24, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Key Points

  • After an OECD Global Tax Deal, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent successfully urged Republicans to strip the Section 899 “revenge tax” from Trump’s big bill, which would have targeted companies with foreign owners.
  • The provision threatened U.S. investment and economic growth, with the Global Business Alliance warning it could cost 360,000 jobs and $55 billion annually in lost GDP.
  • GOP leaders said they’d restore the measure if other countries “walk away” from the deal, and touted the removal as boosting global stability and U.S. investment.
  • The change complicates Republican efforts to offset the bill’s projected $2.4 trillion deficit increase as they race to meet the president’s July 4 deadline amid other parliamentary hurdles on Medicaid provisions.
  • Five stocks to consider instead of .

WASHINGTON (AP) — Congressional Republicans agreed to remove the so-called revenge tax provision from President Donald Trump’s big bill on Thursday after a request by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.

The Section 899 provision that was nixed would have allowed the federal government to impose taxes on companies with foreign owners, as well as investors from countries judged as charging “unfair foreign taxes” on U.S. companies.

The measure was expected to lead many companies to avoid investing in the U.S. out of concern that they could face steep taxes. But the removal of the provision adds a wrinkle to Republicans’ plans to try to offset the cost of the massive package.

Bessent said in an X post that he made the request to lawmakers after reaching an agreement with other countries on the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development Global Tax Deal. He said that after “months of productive dialogue,” they would “announce a joint understanding among G7 countries that defends American interests.”

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, and House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith, R-Mo., said they would remove the provision. But, they noted, “Congressional Republicans stand ready to take immediate action if the other parties walk away from this deal or slow walk its implementation.”

The removal of the provision will provide “greater certainty and stability for the global economy and will enhance growth and investment in the United States and beyond,” Bessent said in his post.

An analysis by the Global Business Alliance, a trade group representing international companies such as Toyota and Nestlé, estimates that the provision would have cost the U.S. 360,000 jobs and $55 billion annually over 10 years in lost gross domestic product.

The Global Business Alliance was among several groups that signed a letter addressed to Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and Crapo warning of the consequences of Section 899.

Republicans are rushing to finish the package this week to meet the president's Fourth of July deadline for passage.

Earlier Thursday, the Senate parliamentarian advised that a Medicaid provider tax overhaul central to the spending bill does not adhere to the chamber’s procedural rules, delivering a crucial blow to Republicans, who are counting on big cuts to Medicaid and other programs to offset trillions of dollars in Trump tax breaks.

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