Johnson says the approach to canceling the Irish Republican army will be “between a scalpel and a heavy hammer.”



The spokesman Mike Johnson (R-La) this week indicated that his approaches to cancel the climate of Democrats, taxes, infrastructure and health care will not be sensitive, accurate or complete reform.

“It will be somewhere between a scalpel and a heavy hammer. Johnson told reporters on Wednesday,” We will see. “

He leaves the comment from his previous speech on the future of the law to reduce inflation (IRA).

In September, the spokesman told the spokesman that he wanted to take “scalpel, not a heavy hammer, because there are some judgments that generally helped.”

It is not quite clear, what will mean to leave in practice, if any, to legislate. The 2022 Law, which received democratic sounds only, contains billions of tax credits for low -carbon energy sources, as well as new taxes on large companies and provisions that allow medical care to negotiate the price of some medicines.

Now that Republicans in the House of Representatives, the Senate and the White House control, they look forward to curbing the law to reduce inflation – especially as they are looking for ways to pay the price of the tax cuts they want.

However, it remains an open question whether or any of the law tax credits of the law will be modified in particular. A group of 18 Republicans in the House of Representatives wrote last year a letter to Johnson, saying they wanted to maintain some credits.

Targeting any specific source of credit or energy becomes difficult, especially with the skinny majority at home.

Many areas controlled by the Republican Party have projects that benefit from solar energy credits, wind, biofuels, nuclear energy or the manufacture of electric vehicles, and therefore it may be difficult to find credits agreed upon by all Republican members to reduce them.

Mychael Schnell contributed.

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