HR 4810 · 106th Congress · Taxation

Marriage Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2000

Introduced 2000-07-10· Sponsored by Rep. Archer, Bill [R-TX-7]· House

Bill Progress

1
Introduced
Committee
3
House Vote
4
Senate
5
Enacted
Latest: On motion to refer the bill and the accompanying veto message to the Committee on Ways and Means. Agreed to without objection.(2000-09-13)

Recorded Votes

FailedHouse · 2000-09-13
Roll #466
Yea 270Nay 158
Democrats
48 Yea·157 Nay
Republicans
221 Yea·0 Nay
FailedHouse · 2000-09-13
Roll #466
Yea 270Nay 158
Democrats
48 Yea·157 Nay
Republicans
221 Yea·0 Nay
PassedSenate · 2000-07-21
Roll #226
Yea 60Nay 34
PassedSenate · 2000-07-21
Roll #226
Yea 60Nay 34

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Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Marriage Tax Penalty Relief Reconciliation Act of 2000 - States that no amendment made by this Act shall be treated as a tax rate change for purposes of section 15 (effect of changes on tax rates) of the Internal Revenue Code. (Sec. 2) Amends the Internal Revenue Code to provide that the basic standard deduction for a married couple filing jointly shall be twice the basic standard deduction for an unmarried individual, beginning in 2001. (Sec. 3) Provides that the 15 percent regular income tax bracket for a married couple filing jointly shall be twice the size of the corresponding bracket for an unmarried individual. Sets forth a graduated phase-in beginning in 2003 and fully effective in 2008. Repeals provisions that reduce the refundable child credit (as applicable to the additional credit for families with three or more children) and earned income credit by the amount of the taxpayer's alternative minimum tax, beginning in 2002. (Sec. 4) Increases the beginning point of the phase-out range of the earned income credit for married couples filing jointly by $2,000, beginning in 2001.…

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

CBO Cost Estimate

Congressional Budget Office

H.R. 4810, Marriage Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2000

Jul 25, 2000

Pay-as-you-go estimate for the bill as cleared by the Congress on July 21, 2000

Full CBO report ↗

Official non-partisan budget analysis by the Congressional Budget Office