Trump Hits Nail on Head with Affordability Policy and Democrats Don’t Know What to Do About It
Written by John Loftus, Published on Daily Caller Reporter (on March 31, 2026)
President Trump’s new affordability policy is beginning to soak into the system, leaving Democrats unsure what to do about it. In fact, some Democrats kinda … like it? As part of the tax cuts in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025, Republicans carved out a provision allowing for tax deductions on overtime pay up to $25,000. According to new Treasury Department data, nearly 20 million Americans have already reaped its benefits this filing season, Politico reported Tuesday.
There are some caveats and restrictions, however: The tax break applies only to specific kinds of compensation, and eligibility is limited to the additional “half” of time-and-a-half pay, even if an individual’s actual overtime rate was higher, Politico noted. Claims are also only permissible for weeks where total hours worked exceeded 40. Further, since the tax cuts were signed into law by Trump in 2025, businesses might struggle to retroactively calculate how much overtime pay is eligible for the deduction.
As Politico noted, the Treasury Department tried to remedy this problem by temporarily waiving a requirement for companies to report to workers how much of their income would be eligible, leaving some skeptics worried that workers using the deduction this year might not even be eligible.
Nevertheless, some Democrats appear to want the provision kept in place permanently or improved upon. “Anything we can do to make life easier for wage workers who need overtime, I’m certainly interested in,” Democratic Pennsylvania Rep. Brendan Boyle told Politico. Democratic California Rep. Mike Thompson went so far as saying, “It should be enhanced. There’s some things that could be done to make it better.”
Meanwhile, Democratic Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen wants to piggyback off Trump’s tax cuts and has proposed a complete end to income tax for people making under $46,000. “This legislation is designed to make sure that individuals benefiting from those kinds of provisions do at least as well, or better,” Van Hollen said. “And it’s designed to help everybody.” But the senator expressed no desire to nix the Trump overtime and “No tax on tips” provision, because he probably knows that they are slam-dunk ideas, broadly popular among both Republicans and Democrats.
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