INTERNACIONAL
GOP push to make Trump’s 2017 tax cuts permanent, say going back would be a ‘dramatic’ change for many
Tax season is done.
And this year, Congressional Republicans converted tax season to «sales» season. Republicans and President Donald Trump are pushing to approve a bill to reauthorize his 2017 tax cut package. Otherwise, those taxes expire later this year.
«We absolutely have to make the tax cuts permanent,» said Rep. Tom Tiffany, R-Wis., on FOX Business.
«We’ve got to get the renewal of the President’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. That’s absolutely essential,» said Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., on FOX Business.
Rates for nearly every American spike if Congress doesn’t act within the next few months.
CONFIDENCE IN DEMOCRATS HITS ALL TIME LOW IN NEW POLL

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., talks with the media after the House passed the budget resolution on Thursday, April 10, 2025. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
«We are trying to avoid tax increases on the most vulnerable populations in our country,» said Rep. Beth Van Duyne, R-Texas, a member of the House Ways and Means Committee which determines tax policy. «I am trying to avoid a recession.»
If Congress stumbles, the non-partisan Tax Foundation estimates that a married couple with two children – earning $165,000 a year – is slapped with an extra $2,400 in taxes. A single parent with no kids making $75,000 annually could see a $1,700 upcharge on their tax bill. A single parent with two children bringing home $52,000 a year gets slapped with an additional $1,400 in taxes a year.
«Pretty significant. That’s an extra mortgage payment or extra rent payment,» said Daniel Bunn of the non-partisan Tax Foundation. «People have been kind of used to living with the policies that are currently in law for almost eight years now. And the shift back to the policy that was prior to the 2017 tax cuts would be a dramatic tax increase for many.»
But technically, Republicans aren’t cutting taxes.
«As simple as I can make this bill. It is about keeping tax rates the same,» said Sen. James Lankford, R-Oklahoma, on Fox.
Congress had to write the 2017 tax reduction bill in a way so that the reductions would expire this year. That was for accounting purposes. Congress didn’t have to count the tax cuts against the deficit thanks to some tricky number-crunching mechanisms – so long as they expired within a multi-year window. But the consequence was that taxes could climb if lawmakers failed to renew the old reductions.
«It sunsets and so you just automatically go back to the tax levels prior to 2017,» said Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.
A recent Fox News poll found that 45% of those surveyed – and 44% of independents believe the rich don’t pay enough taxes.
Democrats hope to turn outrage about the perceived tax disparity against Trump.
«He wants his billionaire buddies to get an even bigger tax break. Is that disgraceful?» asked Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., at a rally in New York.
«Disgrace!» shouted someone in the crowd.
«Disgraceful! Disgraceful!» followed up Schumer.

U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., (R) speaks alongside Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., (L) to reporters during a news conference on the impacts of the Republican budget proposal at the U.S. Capitol on April 10, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)
Some Republicans are now exploring raising rates on the wealthy or corporations. There’s been chatter on Capitol Hill and in the administration about exploring an additional set of tax brackets.
«I don’t believe the president has made a determination on whether he supports it or not,» said White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt.
«We’re going to see where the President is» on this, said Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent while traveling in Argentina. «Everything is on the table.»
A Treasury spokesperson then clarified Bessent’s remarks.
«What’s off the table is a $4.4 trillion tax increase on the American people,» said the spokesperson. «Additionally, corporate tax cuts will set off a manufacturing boom and rapidly grow the U.S. economy again.»
Top Congressional GOP leaders dismissed the idea.
«I’m not a big fan of doing that,» said House Speaker Mike Johnson on Fox. «I mean we’re the Republican party and we’re for tax reduction for everyone.»
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«I don’t support that initiative,» said House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., on FOX Business, before adding «everything’s on the table.»
But if you’re President Donald Trump and the GOP, consider the politics of creating a new corporate tax rate or hiking taxes on the well-to-do.

Sunrise light hits the U.S. Capitol dome on Thursday, January 2, 2025, as the 119th Congress is set to begin Friday. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
The president has expanded the GOP base. Republicans are no longer the party of the «wealthy.» Manual laborers, shop and storekeepers and small business persons now comprise Trump’s GOP. So maintaining these tax cuts helps with that working-class core. Raising taxes on the wealthy would help Republicans pay for the tax cuts and reduce the hit on the deficit. And it would shield Republicans from the Democrats’ argument that the tax cuts are for the rich.
Congress is now in the middle of a two-week recess for Passover and Easter. GOP lawmakers and staff are working behind the scenes to actually write the bill. No one knows exactly what will be in the bill. Trump promised no taxes on tips for food service workers. There is also talk of no taxes on overtime.
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Republicans from high-tax states like New York and Pennsylvania want to see a reduction of «SALT.» That’s where taxpayers can write off «state and local taxes.» This provision is crucial to secure the support of Republicans like Reps. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., and Mike Lawler, R-N.Y. But including the SALT reduction also increases the deficit.
So what will the bill look like?
«Minor adjustments within that are naturally on the table,» said Rounds. «The key though, [is] 218 in the House and 51 in the Senate.»
In other words, it’s about the math. Republicans need to develop the right legislative brew which commands just the right amount of votes in both chambers to pass. That could mean including certain provisions – or dumping others. It’s challenging. Especially with the slim House majority.

People attend a press conference and rally in support of fair taxation near the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. on April 10, 2025. (Bryan Dozier / Middle East Images / Middle East Images via AFP)
«There were trade-offs and offsets within that bill that many people are dissatisfied with,» said Bunn of the 2017 bill. «And it’s not clear how the package is going to come together with those various trade-offs.»
Johnson wants the bill complete by Memorial Day. Republicans know this enterprise can’t drag on too late into the year. Taxpayers would see a tax increase – even if it’s temporary – if working out the bill stretches into the fall when the IRS begins to prepare for the next tax season.
It’s also thought that finishing this sooner rather than later would provide some stability to the volatile stock markets. Establishing tax policy for next year would calm anxieties about the nation’s economic outlook.
«The big, beautiful bill,» Trump calls it, adding he wants the legislation done «soon.»
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And that’s why tax season is now sales season. Both to the lawmakers. And to the public.
Politics,Taxes,Congress,Donald Trump
INTERNACIONAL
Los expertos en restauración desaconsejan el traslado del ‘Guernica’: “No está preparado para viajar ni debería hacerlo si quiere conservarse bien”

Corre estos días por el Museo Reina Sofía una gran inquietud que llega hasta el País Vasco. Desde que el lehendakari Imanol Pradales alzase la voz para pedir el traslado del Guernica, el icónico cuadro de Pablo Picasso, se han sucedido las declaraciones cruzadas y demás polémicas. Pero faltaba por conocer la opinión de quien realmente conoce mejor el cuadro: los restauradores. En muchas ocasiones, los considerados como “doctores” del arte han salido al paso para proteger la integridad de la obra por encima de cualquier interés político.
“Por un lado restauramos aquello que está deteriorado u oscurecido por el tiempo, lo volvemos a un estado lo más cercano posible al original. Pero también cuidamos de la obra en todos esos transportes”, comienza explicando María Antonia López de Asiaín, restauradora del Museo Nacional del Prado, quien habla con Infobae tras desatarse la polémica en torno al cuadro de Picasso. “El Guernica no está preparado para viajar. Ni debería viajar si quiere conservarse bien, porque es una obra muy grande, con mucho deterioro por el tiempo. Cuando se trajo del MoMA enrollado, tenía una serie de fisuras verticales, un craquelado que está fijo, que está estable, pero que no te admite el traslado”, zanja de primeras la experta, que coincide de pleno con el informe elaborado desde el propio Museo Reina Sofía, que desaconseja rotundamente el traslado del cuadro.
Pero, ¿por qué entraña tanto riesgo este movimiento que sugieren desde el País Vasco para celebrar el 90º aniversario del bombardeo de Guernica?

“Los restauradores revisamos la obra y emitimos un informe de conservación. Y decimos: esta obra sí puede viajar o esta obra no puede viajar. Pero si las condiciones de conservación de la obra sí se pueden apañar o hacer una buena restauración, el cuadro está estable y no corre riesgo, lo aprobamos. En el caso del Guernica, es que no se debe apañar. No es que no se pueda, es que no se debe”, recalca la restauradora del Prado, en el cual estuvo el Guernica durante más de 11 años antes de su traslado definitivo al Reina Sofía.
Un traslado que, a pesar de la escasa distancia, ya tenía gran dificultad. “En aquel momento, la empresa de transportes hizo como un camión, como que el suelo entre las ruedas bajaba… Porque no dan la altura, los camiones, punto. De obra de arte tiene tres metros de altura. Y este cuadro no cabe. En la anterior ocasión que se pidió, diseñaron hasta un viaje en carreteras que tuviera los puentes de suficiente altura para poder llevarlo, porque claro, no es una medida estándar de camión”.
El deterioro del Guernica y las razones para su no traslado
El informe facilitado por el Museo Reina Sofía explica con lujo de detalles por qué se niega al traslado. “Los estudios con luz visible han hecho posible apreciar las diferentes alteraciones que ha sufrido la obra. Respecto al soporte, vemos que el perímetro de la tela presenta un gran número de alteraciones causadas por los múltiples clavados y desclavados del bastidor a los que el lienzo fue sometido a lo largo de su historia. El bastidor original carecía de cuñas intencionalmente, por lo que exigía aplicar fuertes tensiones durante el montaje, tensiones acentuadas por el hecho de ser un lienzo de grandes proporciones”, detalla el estudio publicado hace tan solo unas semanas, que también habla de “alteraciones tales como grietas, craquelados y microfisuras atribuidas mayoritariamente a las tensiones provocadas por los numerosos enrollados, traslados y manipulaciones durante sus años de itinerancia”.
El deterioro y el inmenso tamaño del Guernica (776,6 cm × 349,3 cm) son dos de los aspectos en los que López de Asiaín coincide con el Reina Sofía. “Una obra, en lienzo de tan gran tamaño, cuando la mueves, hace como vela, como un barco. El Guernica está muy deteriorado porque es de gran tamaño y precisamente se puede proteger peor porque es de gran tamaño. Entonces, está muy deteriorado… El enrollado causa una serie de fisuras verticales o de craquelados”, confirma la restauradora, quien por otro lado no es ajena a los intereses políticos que hay detrás de este hipotético movimiento. “Es la machada de decir: ‘Yo me traje el Guernica y el Guernica es nuestro’. Es un poco eso, la cuestión política”.
A pesar de todo, la restauradora defiende vías alternativas al traslado del Guernica para poder celebrar ese aniversario sin poner en riesgo el cuadro. “Hay que diferenciar la obra del mensaje. Es decir, esa obra de arte tiene valor para nosotros, para el Reina Sofía, para los restauradores y para los historiadores del arte. Y para el País Vasco la tiene como mensaje. Entonces, realmente piensas, ¿es lo mismo tener la obra de arte en realidad, que puede sufrir, que puede tener un detrimento? Porque para nosotros es un símbolo de nuestra Guerra Civil, de España, de todo, que no tenemos ningún derecho a deteriorar. No te digo que viaje un póster, pero se pueden hacer realidades 3D, cosas diferentes, muy buenas y con el mismo mensaje», defiende la experta.
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«Esta guerra no ha terminado»: Tres columnistas debaten qué debe suceder a continuación en Irán
INTERNACIONAL
Australia’s most decorated living soldier charged amid fierce debate over war crimes allegations

American freed by Taliban RETURNS HOME
American Dennis Coyle returns to the United States and embraces his loved ones after being arrested and held by the Taliban for over a year in Afghanistan, even though he was never charged with a crime.
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Australian authorities have arrested and charged the country’s most decorated living soldier, Ben Roberts-Smith, 47, with five war crime murders allegedly committed during the war in Afghanistan.
Roberts-Smith, a former member of the Australian Defence Force, was arrested at Sydney Airport on Tuesday. His arrest has sparked outcry from a former Australian prime minister, who argued its unfair to judge the actions of «men in mortal combat by the standards of ordinary civilian life.» X owner Elon Musk also weighed in on the arrest, calling it «insane.»
The Australian Federal Police and the Office of the Special Investigator said Roberts-Smith is being charged in connection with the killings of five unarmed Afghans in three separate incidents between 2009 and 2012. AFP Commissioner Krissy Barrett alleged that Roberts-Smith either killed the unarmed Afghans himself or instructed a subordinate to kill them. If convicted, Roberts-Smith faces life imprisonment on each charge.
«It will be alleged the victims were not taking part in hostilities at the time of their alleged murder in Afghanistan,» Barrett said during a press conference. «It will be alleged the victims were detained, unarmed and were under the control of ADF members when they were killed.»
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Ben Roberts-Smith arrives at the Federal Court in Sydney on June 9, 2021. Australia’s most decorated living war veteran lodged an appeal on Tuesday, July 11, 2023, against a civil court ruling that blamed him for the unlawful killings of four Afghans. (Rick Rycroft/AP)
The investigation into Roberts-Smith began in 2021, according to Ross Barnett, director of investigations at the Office of the Special Investigator. Roberts-Smith received the Victoria Cross after storming two enemy machine guns during his fifth tour in Afghanistan.
Barnett said at the press conference that the investigation was «under challenging circumstances,» given that some of the murders occurred well over a decade ago and investigators were unable to visit Afghanistan.
«We don’t have access to the crime scenes, we don’t have photographs, site plans, measurements, the recovery of projectiles, blood spatter analysis, all of those things we would normally get at a crime scene,» Barnett said at the press conference.
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Corporal Ben Roberts-Smith VC, MG attends a Victoria Cross and George Cross Association Reunion Service at St. Martin-in-the-Fields Church on May 30, 2012 in London, England. (Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images)
While Australia’s current prime minister has yet to weigh in on the arrest, former Australian Prime Minister and leader of the Liberal Party Tony Abbott expressed his support for Roberts-Smith on X in a lengthy post.
«If Ben Roberts-Smith transgressed, why wasn’t this picked up prior to his gallantry awards and why wasn’t any culture of brutality towards prisoners detected by his more senior officers, and dealt with quickly, rather than being allowed to fester, as has been alleged, for over a decade?» Abbott wrote.
Allegations that Roberts-Smith engaged in war crimes began circulating publicly in 2017 and 2018 in articles published by The Age, the Sydney Morning Herald and The Canberra Times.
Roberts-Smith filed a defamation suit against the papers, which became Australia’s most expensive defamation trial, but in 2023, a Federal Court judge ruled that four of the six murder allegations brought by the papers against Roberts-Smith were legitimate.
In one of the allegations ruled to have merit by Justice Anthony Besanko, Roberts-Smith allegedly marched a handcuffed Afghan man named Ali Jan off the edge of a 10-meter cliff. He survived the fall, but Roberts-Smith and his fellow soldiers walked down a footpath to meet him. Roberts-Smith then ordered a subordinate, known as Person 11 in court, to shoot him.

Ben Roberts-Smith departs the Federal Court of Australia in Sydney on June 7, 2021 in Sydney, Australia. (Sam Mooy/Getty Images)
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The High Court dismissed Roberts-Smith’s appeal of the ruling in September 2025.
The criminal charges against Roberts-Smith stem from a joint effort by OSI and AFP. The two Australian agencies have conducted 53 investigations into ADF members tied to war crime allegations in Afghanistan. Ten of the investigations remain ongoing.
australia, afghanistan, army, armed forces, military trials
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