BERGEN BAR TAX BULLETIN, VOL. 41, NO. 1

Written by: Theodore M. David, Chair, Tax Law Committee

Current Items:

  • IRS Gone?
  • Tax Season Internal and External?
  • IRS “Buy-Out”

1) This is going to be a short bar bulletin. In fact, I’m getting this ready even before our new President takes office on January 20. Those who know me realize I am a first-class procrastinator but this time I hope to have my feet in the sand when this bar bulletin actually gets sent. So, I thought I’d take the time right now on a rainy, chilly, dismal kind of New Jersey day to bring you some frightening news about the likelihood of a mess in tax administration about to happen. Now, you may recall that Congress actually funded the Internal Revenue Service in a meaningful way after many years of delay. But now that is one of the areas the President will be looking at to cut and if rumors are to be believed, eliminate. Now, your guess is as good as mine as to what will actually happen after January 20. Tax law is wed to politics. It’s not like a science with immutable rules and results. Even the great Einstein said he couldn’t make sense of it. The problem is, it is whatever Congress says it is. If the Congress is married to the Executive branch, the potential for disruption is present. It’s a shame as the IRS has recently gotten its computers working reasonably well, and its website is simply first class. But any plan to reduce funding and make the IRS and DOJ an arm of the executive is complicated, messy, as well as, I’d guess unconstitutional. “If they can’t follow the agenda, they should leave.” And they have started to do just that. The Commissioner of IRS, Dan Werfel, announced the other day that he will resign on January 20. His term was to go until 2027. IRS top brass always stay through at least a year or two to ease a transition. So, the world of tax administration that we lawyers and accountants contend with will be something as yet unseen. The promise to eliminate the income tax is more concerning but highly unlikely. All this does not seem to add up to a successful Trump term in office with pandemonium in tax administration. So, cutting and firing senior officials at the Internal Revenue Service and losing senior lawyers at DOJ makes no sense and claiming to eliminate the agency altogether sounds truly ridiculous. Or does it? See Item #3. Needless to say, 2025 will be an interesting year.

Among tax ideas floated these days are: eliminate the income tax; make tips tax free; acquire Canada and Greenland (will they be tax havens?); restore the Salt deduction (We in NJ would love that one). Once details seem “real”, if there will be any, I will be glad to let you know. These are strange times in many ways and the tax world is no exception.

By the way, far from being early this Bull ended up late. Typical.

2) An annoying fact of life is that tax season starts in January. But not to fret. You can always visit the IRS website at the Get Ready Page to view key information such as steps to make filing easier, gathering and organizing tax records and life changes that could affect a refund. Or instead you could simply board a plane to somewhere warmer and put this stuff off until the very last minute. Oh, by the way, we will have a brand-new Federal agency on Jan 21. That will have all kinds of fun things to do. The External Revenue Service. It will collect all the Tariff money from Canada and Mexico and the rest of the world too without passing any cost to us citizens, so there will be another tax season coming. An External Tax Season. I’ll let you know when.

3) Where will the ax fall at IRS? The federal “buy-out “may result in whole sections of IRS deciding to grab 8 months of severance and run. You may want to get your 2024 tax return in asap. The idea of eliminating the IRS as an agency sounds beyond the realm. But why not just privatize it? Have a bidding for the job. Like what NASA did to the space race. Maybe even let that high bidder get a cut of the action as well. It’s not a new idea just another complicated and messy one.

Questions or Comments should be sent to:  Tdavidlawyer@gmail.com