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At Baton Rouge Restaurant, Sens. Bill Cassidy and John Thune Talk ‘No Tax on Tips’
The rule lets tipped workers earning under $150,000 deduct up to $25,000 of tips from taxable income through 2028, supporting employees at Phil's Oyster Bar.
Summary by The Advocate
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4 Articles
U.S. Senators discuss 'No Tax on Tips' at Baton Rouge oyster bar
BATON ROUGE -- U.S. Senate majority leader John Thune (R-South Dakota) joined Senator Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana) in Baton Rouge to discuss the "No Tax on Tips" initiative with workers in the Capital City.No tax on tips was one of the major selling points for President Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill."It creates a temporary federal income tax deduction allowing tipped-based workers, like servers and bartenders, to deduct up to $25,000 of their re…
·Baton Rouge, United States
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Leaning Left0Leaning Right0Center3Last UpdatedBias Distribution100% Center
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