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President Trump Is Downsizing The Internal Revenue Service

President Trump Is Downsizing The Internal Revenue Service

Forbes2 days ago
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS), part of the Department of the Treasury, is the federal agency responsible for administering and enforcing federal tax laws. It is currently facing significant challenges due to budget cuts implemented by President Trump.
IRS Staffing Cuts Highlighted in Inspector General Report
The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) publishes reports that provide insight into the operations of the IRS. On July 18, 2025, TIGTA released report number 2025-IE-R027.
The report reveals that the IRS employed 103,000 people at the beginning of 2025. By May, 26,000 of those employees had left or will soon leave, reducing the agency's workforce to 77,000—an attrition that will take place over just seven months (IRS data table).
One Big Beautiful Bill Introduces Sweeping Tax Changes
Congress passed—and President Trump signed into law—One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB), officially titled An Act to Provide for Reconciliation Pursuant to Title II of H. Con. Res. 14 (full bill text).
OBBB is a comprehensive tax overhaul passed solely with Republican votes through the Senate reconciliation process. It includes numerous complex tax and non-tax provisions, which will:
The Legacy of the Inflation Reduction Act
On Aug. 16, 2022, President Biden and Congress passed the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which increased IRS funding by $80 billion over 10 years. Later acts of Congress reduced this amount to $38 billion.
TIGTA tracked the IRS's use of these funds. As of Sept. 30, 2024, the IRS had spent only $9 billion. Of that amount, $2 billion went toward regular annual operating expenses due to shortfalls in its base budget (TIGTA March 2025 report).
The intent of this funding was to modernize the IRS and to increase enforcement on higher income taxpayers.
Treasury Requests Less IRS Funding in 2026
On May 30, 2025, the Department of the Treasury submitted its budget request for fiscal year 2026, calling for a 20% funding reduction compared to the prior year. Excluding IRA-related funds, the Treasury is requesting $12 billion for 2026, down from $13.2 billion in 2025.
Additionally, the department has asked Congress to rescind another $17 billion of the IRA funding, leaving just $21 billion available—more than half of which has already been spent (Treasury FY 2026 budget request).
Congress Proposes Even Deeper Cuts
House Republicans on the Appropriations Committee have introduced a proposal to cut another $2.8 billion from the IRS budget for 2026—above and beyond the Treasury's request. If enacted, this would reduce the IRS budget to levels not seen since 2002 (Bloomberg report). The tax code the IRS is required to enforce is much larger and more complicated than it was in 2002.
Mounting Challenges for the IRS
The IRS faces several challenges heading into the next filing season:
The new IRS commissioner recently stated that the 2026 tax filing season will likely begin around Feb. 16. This indicates the IRS realizes next filing season will be difficult.
What Taxpayers Can Do Now
The upcoming tax season will likely be difficult for the IRS, taxpayers, and tax professionals alike. Here are steps individuals and families can take to prepare:
Looking Ahead
President Trump and he Trump administration are implementing major changes to the IRS. The real impact of these shifts will become clearer in the year to come. Many tax professionals expect the next filing season to be quite challenging.
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After a reference to Trump's impeachments is removed from a history museum, complex questions echo
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After a reference to Trump's impeachments is removed from a history museum, complex questions echo

NEW YORK (AP) — It would seem the most straightforward of notions: A thing takes place, and it goes into the history books or is added to museum exhibits. But whether something even gets remembered and how — particularly when it comes to the history of a country and its leader — is often the furthest thing from simple. The latest example of that came Friday, when the Smithsonian Institution said it had removed a reference to the 2019 and 2021 impeachments of President Donald Trump from a panel in an exhibition about the American presidency. Trump has pressed institutions and agencies under federal oversight, often through the pressure of funding, to focus on the country's achievements and progress and away from things he terms 'divisive.' A Smithsonian spokesperson said the removal of the reference, which had been installed as part of a temporary addition in 2021, came after a review of 'legacy content recently' and the exhibit eventually 'will include all impeachments.' 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In China, for example, references to the June 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Beijing's Tiananmen Square are forbidden and meticulously regulated by the ruling Communist Party government. In Soviet-era Russia, officials who ran afoul of leaders like Josef Stalin disappeared not only from the government itself but from photographs and history books where they once appeared. Jason Stanley, an expert on authoritarianism, said controlling what and how people learn of their past has long been used as a vital tool to maintain power. Stanley has made his views about the Trump administration clear; he recently left Yale University to join the University of Toronto, citing concerns over the U.S. political situation. 'If they don't control the historical narrative,' he said, 'then they can't create the kind of fake history that props up their politics.' 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