Rep. Mike Lawler touts $40K SALT deduction cap for New York as House moves to pass Trump’s tax package
WASHINGTON — Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY) is celebrating an 11th-hour deal for a 400% increase from the current State and Local Tax (SALT) deductions cap as part of President Trump’s “one big beautiful bill,” as the measure still faces some opposition from fiscal hawks for final passage in the House.
“For the middle class, this is a real win, especially in a state like New York,” Lawler told The Post in an exclusive interview Wednesday trumpeting the increase from a $10,000 to a $40,000 deduction cap for individual filers and $20,000 for married couples, noting how his constituents suffer the highest taxes in the country between property and income rates.
That rate would then be projected to increase by 1% over the next decade. New York Republicans had opposed the initially floated $30,000 deduction level and Lawler had previously sought an even higher $100,000 cap.
An amendment was filed to implement the changes in the House Rules Committee around 9 p.m. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) has said the additions — along with changes to Medicaid and green-energy tax credits’ spending — will put the chamber on track for full consideration either late Wednesday or into Thursday.
The Hudson Valley Republican sat through marathon meetings for weeks with White House officials, House Speaker Mike Johnson’s team, GOP members of the chamber’s SALT caucus — and Trump himself, who called out Lawler for pressing the SALT issue in a closed-door meeting on Capitol Hill Tuesday.
“I know your district better than you do,” the president chided during the House Republican conference meeting, warning the New York pol that the push for a higher-than-$30,000 SALT cap risked upending the Republican agenda — and wouldn’t be a determining factor in Lawler’s 2026 re-election bid.