Senate votes to overturn DC tax decoupling, as locals push back
Source: Roll Call
Posted February 12, 2026 at 2:40pm
The Senate passed a joint resolution on Thursday blocking changes to the District of Columbias tax code, which will now head to President Donald Trumps desk. District officials warned it could cause delays during tax season and devastate the citys budget, and suggested Congress had missed its window to intervene in the local actions. It is rare for Congress to use its power to nullify local laws in D.C., with just four other examples in recent decades, according to the Congressional Research Service: in 1979, 1981, 1991 and 2023.
We are seeing sort of an unprecedented level of micromanagement under this administration, and Congress seems to be following this administration in its bullying of D.C., said Stasha Rhodes, a senior adviser at D.C. Vote, an advocacy group that pushes for equality for D.C. residents.
The disapproval resolution would reverse a decision by the D.C. Council to reject some of Trumps signature tax policies, such as no tax on tips. The House narrowly passed the measure last week along party lines, and the final tally in the Senate was 49-47.
In pleas to congressional leaders, local officials cited projections that the District is poised to lose hundreds of millions in revenue over the next five years if it conformed to the federal code. By decoupling, the District was able to put resources toward a local child tax credit and an expanded earned income tax credit, they said.
Read more: https://rollcall.com/2026/02/12/senate-votes-to-overturn-dc-tax-decoupling/
DJ Synikus Makisimus
(1,286 posts)during the Biden Administration? I think so.
For once, the Democrats and their aligned "independents" voted as a united group against this, while four Republicans sat it out, including McConnell, who apparently is not quite dead but not at all well.
https://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_votes/vote1192/vote_119_2_00037.htm
BumRushDaShow
(167,410 posts)The statehood issue has been going on for decades. It was one of Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton's key efforts and there was always some excuse that came out of Congress.
The closet they got to it was back when Sen. Orrin Hatch agreed to sign on for the Senate in 2009 if UT was also given a seat (passing 61-37), but the NRA was able to get an amendment added for the House version that would repeal D.C.'s gun regulations.
The issue of gun regulation in D.C. thwarts it over and over and over.
