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GOP push to make Trump’s 2017 tax cuts permanent, say going back would be a ‘dramatic’ change for many

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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.

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«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.

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CONFIDENCE IN DEMOCRATS HITS ALL TIME LOW IN NEW POLL

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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.

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«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.

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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.

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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.

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«Disgraceful! Disgraceful!» followed up Schumer.

senate minority leader chuck 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.

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«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.»

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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.»

FEDERAL JUDGE TEMPORARILY RESTRICTS DOGE ACCESS TO PERSONALIZED SOCIAL SECURITY DATA

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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. 

Capitol Dome 119th Congress

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.

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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. 

WHITE HOUSE PHOTO BLUNTLY SHOWS WHERE PARTIES STAND ON IMMIGRATION AMID ABREGO GARCIA DEPORTATION

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.

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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.

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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.

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«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.

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Trump admin’s push to end controversial policy extended by Biden sparks backlash ahead of crucial deadline

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A handful of immigrants and advocacy organizations are asking the Trump Administration to extend its March 17 deadline to end the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) afforded to Somalis in the U.S., arguing that the Administration is changing the immigration designation purely along lines motivated by race.

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The change in designation would force roughly 1,080 Somali TPS recipients to self-deport or turn themselves in to immigration enforcement, according to a Tuesday filing before a Massachusetts district court.

«President Trump has smeared the Somali community publicly, categorically, and repeatedly. He has called Somali people ‘garbage’ and ‘low IQ people.’ And he has said point blank: ‘I don’t want [Somali people] in our country,’» the challenge states, referring to remarks President Donald Trump made at a cabinet meeting last year.

«They reflect a desire to target and punish Somali nationals based on their race and national origin in violation of the U.S. Constitution,» the lawsuit continued.

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MINNESOTA FRAUD HEARING SPARKS IMMIGRATION CLASH AS GOP LAWMAKER SPOTLIGHTS SOMALI WELFARE DATA

President Donald Trump speaks with reporters before departing on Marine One from the South Lawn of the White House on March 11, 2026, in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

The suit is brought by African Communities Together and the Partnership for the Advancement of New Americans and lists the Department of Homeland Security as a defendant.

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Their challenge comes amid President Donald Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration and his administration’s continued focus on Somali populations in states like Minnesota, where fraud activity has drawn national attention.

Trump has had an eye towards Somalia since his first term, when, in 2017, he included the country in a travel ban. That focus resurfaced in November 2025 amid news that a number of predominantly Somali-led fraud schemes had allegedly siphoned as much as $9 billion from Minnesota government assistance programs.

The news prompted Trump’s first move against Somali TPS.

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«Minnesota is a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity. I am, as president of the United States, hereby terminating, effective immediately, the Temporary Protected Status for Somalis in Minnesota,» Trump wrote in a November post on Truth Social.

US FREEZES ALL VISA PROCESSING FOR 75 COUNTRIES, INCLUDING SOMALIA, RUSSIA, IRAN

Somali illegal alien and Tim Walz

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested Somali illegal immigrant Abdul Dahir Ibrahim, convicted of fraud, and connected to several high-profile Minnesota politicians, including former Democratic vice-presidential nominee Gov. Tim Walz. (ICE)

Outgoing Secretary of Homeland Security Director Kristi Noem made the designation switch official in January.

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Asked about the TPS designation in the wake of Noem’s recent ouster from the agency earlier this month, a DHS spokesperson confirmed the plans remained unchanged.

«Temporary means temporary. Country conditions in Somalia have improved to the point that it no longer meets the law’s requirement for Temporary Protected Status. Allowing Somali nationals to remain temporarily in the United States is contrary to our national interests. The Trump administration is putting Americans first,» an agency spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

Under the Immigration Law of 1990, Aliens protected by TPS are allowed to work in the United States and are shielded from removal — as long as their country of origin is experiencing «temporary conditions» like war or natural disaster that would prevent their safe return. The attorney general may extend a country’s TPS status for 18 months at a time.

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Somalia, having received TPS in 1991, has held a TPS designation for 35 years.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION BLOCKED FROM ENDING TEMPORARY PROTECTED STATUS FOR HAITIANS

Somali miitary

Soldiers of the Somalia National Army (SNA) walk near the frontlines at Sabiid, one of the towns they have liberated from the Al-Qaeda-linked militants, Al-Shabaab, in Somalia’s lower-Shabelle region on Nov. 11, 2025. (Tony Karumba/AFP via Getty Images)

Tuesday’s filing argues dangerous conditions remain in place, citing terrorist activity from groups like al-Shabaab listed in Somalia’s latest TPS extension.

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«The 2024 redesignation noted that ‘Somalia continues to experience widespread insecurity due to armed conflict involving state and non-state actors,’ … subjecting civilians to human rights abuses including summary executions, indiscriminate and targeted killings, gender-based violence, child recruitment, disappearances and physical abuse,» plaintiffs argued.

DHS declined to comment on its on-the-ground assessments of Somalia’s local conditions.

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Pánico en el paraíso: los millonarios británicos huyen de Dubái bajo la lluvia de misiles de Irán y buscan mansiones en Londres

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Los expatriados británicos se mudaron a los Emiratos Árabes Unidos por la seguridad, el sol, los bajos impuestos y el beneficio de no pagar tributos a la renta. Hoy se fugan de ese paraíso fiscal con playas, servicios a bajo precio, colegios trilingües, piscinas, autos de lujo e impresionantes rascacielos o mansiones. Se marchan aterrorizados por los misiles, las explosiones, el ruido de las defensas, los aviones de combate en el cielo, los incendios y las alertas del gobierno en los teléfonos. La inseguridad creada por la guerra con Irán les ha arrebatado su principal motivo de residencia: la paz.

Buscan regresar a Gran Bretaña, donde el primer desafío es conseguir alojamiento y trabajo en un reino sumido en una seria crisis. Sin embargo, la gran incógnita es cuándo podrán salir. Los vuelos son poco frecuentes porque los misiles impiden la operación normal. Al menos 160.000 británicos esperan ser evacuados, mientras su gobierno estudia una salida por barco ante las dificultades de los vuelos chárter.

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¿Cómo salir?

Los más ricos han contratado empresas de seguridad que se ocupan de toda la logística para sacarlos del Golfo: traslados al aeropuerto en autos blindados con exmilitares como choferes y vuelos privados desde Omán hasta Turquía. El viaje puede costar entre 60.000 y 160.000 dólares, dependiendo del tamaño de la aeronave.

No todos tienen esa suerte. Muchos deben esperar la evacuación y contar con que el espacio aéreo se abra por unas horas para reanudar algún vuelo de línea. Omán, que era una posibilidad más fácil, ha cerrado nuevamente su espacio aéreo hoy debido a los bombardeos en el Estrecho de Ormuz.

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A las autoridades les preocupa el impacto de la guerra en su imagen y el éxodo de quienes eligieron el país como residencia. En un hecho sin precedentes, el presidente de los Emiratos Árabes Unidos, el jeque Mohamed bin Zayed, paseó el lunes por el icónico centro comercial Dubái Mall. Tomó café y estrechó la mano de los transeúntes para tranquilizar a un público desconcertado por las explosiones que han sacudido la ciudad desde el inicio del conflicto.

Las redes sociales se inundaron de videos del mandatario caminando junto al ministro de Defensa, el jeque Hamdan bin Mohammed Al Maktoum, quien también es el príncipe heredero de Dubái. Ambos conversaron y se sentaron en una cafetería del vasto complejo. El jeque Mohamed incluso saludó a varios niños y charló brevemente con los presentes.

Esta muestra pública de «normalidad» ocurre mientras el gobierno intenta proyectar confianza en sus sistemas de defensa aérea, fabricados en Estados Unidos, para repeler los proyectiles disparados por Irán en respuesta a los ataques estadounidenses e israelíes de hace once días.

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Los residentes de Dubái y Abu Dabi volvieron a despertarse el martes con el sonido de las interceptaciones. Se envió una alerta de misiles alrededor de las 3 de la mañana y, desde entonces, la narrativa oficial ha cambiado para evitar el alarmismo. Las recomendaciones telefónicas sugieren no acercarse a las ventanas y protegerse en los estacionamientos, donde se han instalado sillas, reposeras, cafés y juegos para niños.

Se van las empresas

Las importantes consultoras PwC y Deloitte han evacuado sus oficinas en los distritos financieros de Dubái ante la creciente tensión regional. Las compañías tomaron esta medida después de que Irán advirtiera que podría atacar activos económicos y financieros, según informó Daily Sabah. PwC ha cerrado temporalmente sus sedes en Arabia Saudita, Qatar, Emiratos y Kuwait como medida de precaución.

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Residentes y empresas huyen de la pesadilla de Dubái hacia el Reino Unido, buscando alquileres de lujo que alcanzan las 5.000 libras a la semana. Los agentes inmobiliarios británicos afirman que las consultas procedentes de los Emiratos han aumentado un 15% desde que comenzó el conflicto.

Muchos de los que se establecieron allí contactan ahora a agencias de lujo en Londres para gestionar alquileres de emergencia, motivados por el temor a los ataques con drones y las restricciones a la libertad de expresión. Las agencias reportan un aluvión de llamadas de ciudadanos británicos que luchan por volver a su país.

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«Estoy recibiendo un aumento notable de personas que buscan una salida», afirmó Rosy Khalastchy, directora de la oficina de St John’s Wood de Beauchamp Estates. «Se llevaron la sorpresa de pensar que estaban en un lugar seguro cuando, de repente, ya no lo están».

Buscan casas y departamentos lujosos

Además de los británicos adinerados que buscan escapar para protegerse, también hay ciudadanos árabes que desean salir de la región. Otros han pospuesto sus planes de mudarse a los Emiratos y algunos clientes que retrasaban sus compras en Londres ahora las están concretando.

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Will Watson, director de The Buying Solution, trabaja actualmente para tres clientes con sede en Dubái que buscan vivienda urgente en la capital británica. Las familias solicitan propiedades de cuatro dormitorios en zonas como Kensington, Chelsea, Notting Hill o Holland Park. En Gran Bretaña, la cotización de estas casas es semanal, lo que equivaldría a unas 260.000 libras al año.

Watson añadió que los empresarios con oficinas en Dubái y personal joven están preocupados por el futuro. «Un cliente que dirige una empresa de divisas me comentó que todos sus empleados quieren volver. Dicen que lo ocurrido le ha quitado el brillo al destino», explicó. Según su visión, incluso si la situación se calma, será difícil recuperar el atractivo perdido.

Nigel Bishop, de la firma Recoco, coincide en que lo que antes se consideraba un destino futurista y de ensueño se ha convertido en una pesadilla para los profesionales.

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Gran cambio en el mercado del lujo

Si tan solo una fracción de los 240.000 expatriados británicos regresara a casa, representaría un cambio notable para el mercado inmobiliario de lujo en Londres. La actividad en la capital se había desplomado recientemente debido a la abolición del estatus fiscal «Non-Dom» y al aumento del impuesto de timbre al 17%.

Según la agencia Savills, los precios en el mercado londinense cayeron un 4,8% el año pasado. En contraste, el atractivo de Dubái había crecido significativamente; tras los cambios fiscales en el Reino Unido, muchos millonarios se mudaron allí, incluyendo al magnate indio Lakshmi Mittal. Datos de Knight Frank muestran que el año pasado se vendieron 510 viviendas de más de 10 millones de dólares en el emirato, un aumento del 351% respecto a 2021.

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Irán ha lanzado una nueva oleada de ataques en el decimotercer día de guerra. Bahréin reportó impactos contra tanques de combustible y pidió a sus residentes permanecer en casa y cerrar las ventanas tras un ataque en la gobernación de Muharraq. El país alberga la Quinta Flota de la Armada estadounidense y ha sido un blanco constante.

Por su parte, el Ministerio de Defensa de Arabia Saudita afirmó haber interceptado drones que se dirigían al yacimiento petrolífero de Shaybah y al distrito de las embajadas. Kuwait también reportó ataques en su territorio que dejaron dos heridos en un edificio residencial y daños materiales en su aeropuerto internacional.

En los Emiratos, las defensas aéreas siguen respondiendo a amenazas. Se escucharon explosiones en el centro de Dubái y se observaron nubes de humo sobre barrios residenciales. En Abu Dabi, un incendio en el antiguo aeropuerto fue controlado tras interceptar objetivos entrantes, sin que se reportaran heridos.

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Legalize prostitution effort left candidate ‘shocked’ in blue state with rampant human trafficking

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Michael Allen, a Republican candidate for Colorado attorney general, said he was «shocked» by a Democratic proposal to legalize prostitution, warning it would «open the floodgates» to human trafficking in Colorado.

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«It’s hard for me to even decipher why they’ve decided this is the time and place to introduce a radical bill like this,» Allen said in an interview with Fox News Digital.

The bill, which sponsors said would «decriminalize adult commercial sexual activity,» was introduced last month by Democratic state Sens. Nick Hinrichsen and Lisa Cutter and Reps. Lorena García and Rebekah Stewart. 

NEWSOM KNOCKED FOR ‘INSANE’ CALIFORNIA GAS PRICES AFTER BLAMING TRUMP FOR RISING COSTS

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Colorado Republican attorney general candidate Michael Allen, left, said a bill proposed by Democrats to legalize prostitution demonstrates the Democratic Party is «not doing the right things on behalf of the people in this state.» (Courtesy of Michael Allen for Colorado Attorney General; Hyoung Chang/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images; iStock)

According to Allen, the bill would go far beyond Nevada’s law allowing prostitution and would make Colorado «the leader in the entire country on legalized prostitution.»

«I was shocked,» Allen admitted.

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«It doesn’t make any sense to me. It would not solve any issue that is happening on the ground in Colorado. It would not help with our huge budget deficit. It will not help our crime deficit,» he said.

«It is, frankly, very appalling to me that we’ve got four members of the left-leaning Democrat legislature who thought it would be a good idea to just open the floodgates and let these criminal actors run free without any repercussions.»

The bill sponsors did not respond to requests for comment. 

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A current Colorado district attorney, Allen is one of two Republicans running to flip one of the state’s top offices red. If successful, Allen would be the first Republican elected attorney general in over a decade.

Allen said, despite the state being dominated by Democrats, he believes that, after 10 years of «devastatingly bad criminal justice reform,» voters are ready for a Republican attorney general.

Though the bill appears to have stalled for now in the state legislature, Allen said it demonstrates how the Democratic Party is «not doing the right things on behalf of the people in this state.»

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The only outcome he predicts will result should the prostitution bill ever pass is «continued depravity in the state of Colorado.»

DEMOCRAT RISING STAR CALLED OUT FOR ‘CREEPY’ COMMENT ABOUT TRANSGENDER CHILDREN

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The Colorado state capitol in Denver (Michael Ciaglo)

«Prostitution is a natural outgrowth of human trafficking,» he said. «The links are undeniable.»

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He explained that, in Colorado, «You’ve got two major corridors of travel that go through the state,» which, he said, «are major arteries for human trafficking, and we see that in the Denver metro area as a huge hub for human trafficking.»

Colorado is seeing record highs in human trafficking victims and is ranked among the states with the highest numbers of reports, according to data gathered by the Common Sense Institute. Further, according to the study, 79% of Colorado human trafficking crimes were for the purposes of commercial sex. The study also backs Allen’s claim that the trafficking is concentrated in the Denver area.

MODERATE DEMOCRATS LOOKING PAST KAMALA HARRIS FOR 2028, SUGGESTING PARTY ‘START OVER’

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Allen noted that the city of Denver is already a «huge hub» for human trafficking. (Chet Strange/AFP)

As attorney general, Allen vowed to work to finally turn the tables on the rampant human trafficking in Colorado.

«The attorney general’s office has the ability to use the statewide grand jury to investigate those crimes and then also prosecute those crimes and hold people accountable,» he said.

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He believes the upcoming midterm election in Colorado, including his race for attorney general, will be «pivotal.»

«We need to have a better, stronger and more effective posture from our Colorado Attorney General’s Office to combat criminal activity that is, frankly, affecting the entire state of Colorado,» he said.

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