President Barack Obama will unveil a slate of reforms during Tuesday’s State of the Union speech aimed to close “unfair” tax loopholes and ease the financial burden on middle class families. But he’ll likely get a fight from Republicans on some key parts of his proposal.
Historically, it has been a challenge for both political parties to find common ground on taxes. Corporate tax reforms, however, are one area that Obama and Republicans, who now control Congress after a sweeping victory in the midterm elections, have identified as a point of possible agreement this year.
Still, the devil is in the details, and senior Obama administration officials are counting on the public to get behind the plan, which targets wealthy individuals and financial firms. The administration is touting how it wants to revamp the tax code and eliminate various loopholes as more ways to keep the American economy on the upswing and help grow the middle class.
The tax reforms would raise about $320 billion in revenue over the next decade, the administration said.
“The president will have a chance to go before the nation to tell America, ‘Here’s how far you have come, here’s what works in doing that,’ and then he will be able to lay out the vision for what are the steps that we need to take,” a senior administration official told NBC News on Saturday.
“Our estimation is, not having provided this additional context ahead of time, it’s going to make the speech and the vision more meaningful when [the people] hear it on Tuesday night,” the senior official added.
In the lead up to Obama’s next-to-last State of the Union address, the president has spent recent weeks unveiling somewhat smaller administration proposals, from providing free community collegefor qualified students to endorsing paid sick leave and ways to bolster online security in the wake of the Sony Pictures cyber attack.








