Make President Trump's tax cuts permanent
Make President Trump's tax cuts permanent.
Occurrences
In Congress, I will fight to make these tax cuts permanent and stop extreme liberals from raising your taxes.
Evidence
On May 22, 2025, Rep. Guy Reschenthaler said he voted for H.R. 1, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, and stated that it 'prevents a 22 percent tax hike on working families by making the 2017 Trump tax cuts permanent.'
The House Clerk records that on May 22, 2025, Roll Call 145 on H.R. 1, 'One Big Beautiful Act,' passed the House by a vote of 215-214-1.
GovInfo shows H.R. 1 became Public Law 119-21 on July 4, 2025, and the text states that section 70101 'extends and enhances reduced rates' by striking the 2026 sunset and making the rate changes apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2025.
IRS guidance issued after enactment says Public Law 119-21, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, 'permanently extends certain changes originally enacted by the TCJA' and states that section 70101 makes the tax rate tables permanent.
The IRS’s One, Big, Beautiful Bill provisions page, updated in the lookback window, states that the Act was signed into law on July 4, 2025 as Public Law 119-21 and explains that several TCJA-era tax provisions were made permanent, including HSA-related changes described as permanent on the page.
Assessments
Delivered. During Reschenthaler's current federal House term, H.R. 1 became Public Law 119-21 on July 4, 2025, and federal tax guidance and the enacted text indicate that key 2017 Trump/TCJA tax provisions, including individual rate changes, were made permanent by removing the scheduled sunset. Reschenthaler also voted for the House passage of the bill and publicly supported it as making the 2017 Trump tax cuts permanent, so candidate credit is direct and timing is same_term.
The promise was to make President Trump's tax cuts permanent. Evidence shows H.R. 1 became Public Law 119-21 on July 4, 2025, and permanently extended key TCJA provisions, including making the individual tax rate tables permanent by removing the 2026 sunset. Reschenthaler voted for and publicly supported the bill during the same term, so the promised outcome was delivered.