
Trump's budget bill could complicate 2026 tax filing season after IRS cuts, watchdog warns
WASHINGTON (AP) — The budget bill championed by President Donald Trump could complicate next year's tax filing season after the IRS lost one-quarter of its employees through staffing cuts, an independent watchdog reported Wednesday.
The IRS workforce has fallen from 102,113 workers to 75,702 over the past year, according to the latest National Taxpayer Advocate report to Congress. The report Wednesday offered the first official numbers on the IRS job losses associated with Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency.
Some of the findings from the report:
Taxpayers will likely see effects of staffing reductions
The Trump administration's efforts to shrink the size of the federal bureaucracy to a mass exodus of probationary employees who had not yet gained civil service protections and were offered buyouts through a 'deferred resignation program.' More than 17,500 IRS workers took that route. The biggest cuts were in taxpayer services, the small business/self-employed office and information technology.
The report noted that the Republican administration's proposed budget includes a 20% reduction in IRS funding next year. That's a 37% reduction when taking into account the supplemental funding in the Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act that Republicans previously stripped away.
'A reduction of that magnitude is likely to impact taxpayers and potentially the revenue collected," wrote Erin M. Collins, who leads the organization assigned to protect taxpayers' rights.
The 2026 tax season could be precarious
Collins said the 2025 filing season was 'one of the most successful filing seasons in recent memory,' though she warned that the 2026 season could be rocky.
'With the IRS workforce reduced by 26% and significant tax law changes on the horizon, there are risks to next year's filing season,' Collins wrote. "It is critical that the IRS begin to take steps now to prepare.'
She said that, halfway through the year, there were concerns that the IRS had not yet undertaken key preparation steps, including hiring and training seasonal and permanent employees.
Trump's package could add new layer of problems
The report warned about the possibility of understaffing to manage new provisions from Trump's legislative package if it's enacted.
'Several provisions will retroactively affect the 2025 tax year, thus impacting millions of taxpayers and requiring the IRS to quickly update tax year 2025 tax forms and programming for the 2026 filing season," the report said.
Specifically, the House bill retroactively prohibits the IRS from allowing or making payment of Employee Retention Credit claims filed after Jan. 31, 2024.
The report also said the IRS historically receives more calls in years following significant changes in tax law, so it may need additional employees and improved digital tools to maintain its level of service.
Identity theft cases are still piling up
The IRS is dealing with delays in resolving self-reported identity theft victim assistance cases — taking up to 20 months to resolve, the report said.
As of the end of the 2025 filing season, the IRS was handling about 387,000 of these cases.
That is a slight improvement from the more than 22 months it took to resolve identity theft cases, as noted in last year's report, which outlined roughly 500,000 unresolved cases in its inventory.
'The cycle time remains unacceptably long," Collins said. 'I continue to urge the agency to focus on dramatically shortening the time it takes' to resolved identity theft cases, "so it does not force victims, particularly those dependent on their tax refunds, to wait nearly two years to receive their money.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Politico
23 minutes ago
- Politico
Playbook PM: Trump tallies wins as he leaves NATO summit
Presented by THE CATCH-UP THE VICTORY LAP CONTINUES: President Donald Trump took center stage at the NATO summit in the Netherlands today, touting his brokered ceasefire between Iran and Israel that seems to be holding, as well as the defense spending commitment that he secured from NATO allies — a 'monumental win for the United States' as Trump called it. What Trump said: The president spent a large portion of a nearly hourlong news conference blasting the intel assessment reported yesterday that found Iran's nuclear capabilities had only been set back by months. 'We think we hit 'em so hard and so fast, they didn't get to move,' Trump said, while slamming the NYT and CNN for their reporting. 'We destroyed the nuclear. It's blown up … to kingdom come.' He even compared the attack to the nuclear bombs detonated in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, Reuters' Jeff Mason and Gram Slattery report. 'This ended a war in a different way,' he said. Especially upset: Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who's ordered a Pentagon investigation into the initial assessment leak per POLITICO's Paul McLeary. Hegseth said at the news conference there was 'low confidence' in the initial report on the damage, adding: 'If you want to make an assessment at what happened at Fordo, get a big shovel and go deep, because Iran's nuclear program is obliterated.' The damage: Iran's Foreign Ministry said today that their nuclear installations were 'badly damaged' but didn't provide many more details, Bloomberg's Dana Khraiche reports. Trump said in a Truth Social post that Israel backed up his 'OBLITERATED' claim. What comes next: Trump said he'll be talking with Iran next week, and he will 'probably' ask for a written statement that Iran won't pursue a nuclear weapon again. 'But they're not going to be doing it anyway,' adding that it's a possibility Iran signs an agreement. Asked whether the two sides could resume fighting, Trump said 'I think they're very much finished.' WORD PLAY: NATO allies cemented their agreement today to boost defense spending to 5 percent — but not all the allies, thanks to the language in the group's comminqué, NYT's Lara Jakes writes. 'The difference lies in a bit of mushy diplomatic language that lets the NATO secretary general, Mark Rutte, claim that he delivered on President Trump's spending demand. The brief and unanimously approved communiqué that NATO issued after leaders wrapped up their annual summit says that 'allies' — not 'all allies' — had agreed to the 5 percent figure.' Striking back: Trump lashed out at Spain, which didn't agree to the 5 percent bump, and signaled he's ready to retaliate for what he views as an ally not stepping up to the plate — threatening Madrid will pay 'twice as much' in tariffs in a renegotiated trade deal, POLITICO's Eli Stokols and Felicia Schwartz report. And yet, Trump 'declared outright that NATO allies' 'passion' for their collective defense had erased much of his long-held skepticism about the alliance,' Eli and Felicia write. ME AND Z: Trump also met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the sidelines of the summit, who 'couldn't have been nicer,' Trump said. Zelenskyy called the meeting 'long and substantive,' and it prompted Trump to consider sending more Patriot air-defense batteries to the war-torn country, per Bloomberg's Daryna Krasnolutska and Andrea Dudik. After talking with Zelenskyy, Trump told reporters that Russian President 'Vladimir Putin really has to end that war.' Mixed signals: Secretary of State Marco Rubio signaled that the U.S. likely wouldn't slap more sanctions on Russia, Eli reports with more of our POLITICO colleagues. But that softer stance from Rubio 'came as a surprise to the NATO foreign ministers Rubio met the night before,' who he told that the Senate would likely take up sanctions legislation soon. MOOD MUSIC: Rutte appears to have 'cracked the code for a successful leaders' summit involving President Donald Trump: Call him 'daddy,'' POLITICO's Felicia Schwartz and colleagues write from The Hague. 'Add to that a significantly slimmed-down schedule that was long on praise for the president — Rutte's 'daddy' was intended as a compliment for intervening in the fighting between Israel and Iran — and short on existential questions like how alliance members will fund their most significant spending increase since the end of the Cold War.' IN THE AIR: Trump is on his way back to the U.S., per the pool. He's leaving what was surely nicer weather and will return to swampy humidity once he's back (stay inside, folks). Good Wednesday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Spot something? Send it my way at abianco@ 7 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW 1. IN THE HOT SEAT: Emil Bove, a top Justice Department official, and federal appeals court nominee testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee this morning for a confirmation hearing for his appointment to a federal appeals court. Sen. Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on the panel, said Bove was in a 'category all of his own' in terms of controversial Trump judicial nominees, POLITICO's Hailey Fuchs and Erica Orden report. On the controversies: Bove said he 'never advised a Department of Justice attorney to violate a court order,' as a whistleblower complaint alleged. He also defended DOJ's controversial decision to squash the corruption prosecution of NYC Mayor Eric Adams and denied that there was any quid pro quo to get Adams' cooperation on immigration enforcement — though he did say 'policy reasons made it appropriate to dismiss the charges.' More from Hailey and Erica 2. THE VIEW FROM 1600 PENN: The White House is on a messaging push as the self-imposed July 4 deadline to deliver the megabill rapidly approaches. Stephen Miran, the White House's chief economist, said Trump's policies will reduce the budget deficit by up to $11 trillion over the next decade, Bloomberg's Skylar Woodhouse reports. Half the savings would come from economic growth and another part would come from tariff revenue, Miran said. Report card: It's part of an analysis by the Council of Economic Advisers sent to Congress today as the administration ramps up its efforts to sell the sprawling reconciliation bill, per POLITICO's Jordain Carney. 'The analysis is significantly rosier than projections from most other economists, who doubt that the Republican plan will do much for growth,' Jordain writes. Read the full report Clamping down: NEC Director Kevin Hassett is urging trade partners to get a deal done before the megabill, which could make the bill's controversial 'revenge tax,' which raises taxes on foreign companies and investors in retaliation, a moot point, Bloomberg's Emily Birnbaum and Lauren Vella report. Clicker: 'How much will you save or lose with Trump's 'big' tax bill?' by WaPo 3. MAMDANI MANIA: Just hours after Zohran Mamdani claimed the Democratic nomination in the NYC mayoral contest, Republicans are racing to turn the 33-year-old democratic socialist into their new boogeyman ahead of next year's midterms, POLITICO's Jacob Wendler reports. A host of prominent MAGA-aligned commentators 'launched xenophobic attacks' against the Mamdani's Muslim religion, POLITICO's Nicole Markus writes. But Mamdani's ascension marks a 'watershed moment for Muslim New Yorkers,' roughly one million of whom call NYC home and played a critical role in expanding the electorate that delivered for Mamdani, NYT's Maya King reports. Calls from Congress: In a pair of posts on X this morning, Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries — Democrats' top two congressional leaders who both hail from New York — offered guarded praise for Mamdani. Schumer congratulated Mamdani on an 'impressive campaign,' while Jeffries lauded it as a 'strong campaign.' Both applauded his focus on the economy and each said they had spoken to Mamdani this morning and planned to meet in person soon. But absent from both messages was a full-throated endorsement. Welcome to the general election: Eric Adams, who is now set to face off against Mamdani in November, went on Fox News this morning to preview his attack line. 'He's a snake oil salesman, he will say and do anything to get elected,' Adams said on 'Fox and Friends.' 4. THE REAL-WORLD IMPACT: Speaker Mike Johnson's state of Louisiana is 'uniquely vulnerable' to cuts to Medicaid and food assistance programs included in the 'big, beautiful bill,' POLITICO's Liz Crampton reports in a must read from Shreveport in Johnson's district. 'Louisiana is poorer, sicker and hungrier than most states, and the deep cuts to Medicaid have a growing number of Republicans in Louisiana worried that Congress and the White House are going too far,' Liz writes. 'More than 1.6 million Louisianans — roughly 35 percent of the state's population — count on it for health care.' 5. HOLD YOUR FIRE: Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) — the bullseye for many a Trump Truth Social post — wants a truce, WSJ's Olivia Beavers and colleagues report. The consistent attacks are 'not about changing my vote' on the megabill, adding that they are 'flogging me to keep the other horses in the barn,' Massie said. But he still wants to cool things down: 'I want a cease-fire. I survived the bunker busters. Let's call it even.' More on Massie: The Kentucky Republican has been a consistent thorn in Trump's side, and Trump-aligned GOP groups have already drawn up plans to oust him in 2026, POLITICO's Brakkton Booker and colleagues write. Things could get expensive, fast: 'Some Republican strategists estimate combined spending could reach as high as $45 million, an unheard of total for a primary contest in the 4th Congressional District.' Says Chris LaCivita in a text message to POLITICO: 'He has established himself as a contrarian for contrarian sake … He should be a man and switch parties instead of posing as a Republican.' 6. IMMIGRATION FILES: The Trump administration has promised to target the 'worst of the worst immigrants,' but so far only 6% of known immigrant offenders have been arrested, NBC's Julia Ainsley and Laura Strickler scooped. Almost half those in ICE custody have no charges or criminal convictions at all. And exclusive reporting from CNN's Priscilla Alvarez reveals the Trump administration is preparing to dismiss hundreds of thousands of asylum claims to speed the deportations of migrants. Behind the curtain: 'Inside the Global Deal-Making Behind Trump's Mass Deportations,' by NYT's Edward Wong and colleagues: 'U.S. officials have approached Angola, Mongolia and embattled Ukraine. … The U.S. government paid Rwanda $100,000 to take an Iraqi man and is discussing sending more deportees there. Peru has said no so far, despite having been pressed repeatedly. … The Trump administration has spoken to at least 29 nations in Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia … Beyond that, the State Department has asked diplomats overseas to approach at least another 29 countries, most of them in Africa, for a total of at least 58.' 7. 2026 WATCH: Scott Brown, the former ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa and Massachusetts senator, is making another play for the Senate, hoping to replace retiring Democrat Jeanne Shaheen in New Hampshire, WMUR's Adam Sexton scooped. Brown becomes the highest-profile Republican to enter the race, which the GOP believes it can flip next fall. Asked if he has assurances of Trump's support, Brown said: 'There's no assurances in anything in life at all. I live every day as if it's my last — and certainly I would love the president's endorsement.' TALK OF THE TOWN SPOTTED: CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz dining at the Occidental last night. MEDIAWATCH — WaPo is launching a new program that will allow sources quoted in its articles to annotate or add additional information, NYT's Ben Mullin scooped. 'The program will allow only people identified by name in an article to comment on it, and the articles included for now are only those published by The Post's climate team.' OUT AND ABOUT — SPOTTED at a reelection fundraiser for Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) hosted by Lyndon Boozer, Fred Humphries, Steve Hartell, Laurie Knight and James Assey at Cafe Fiorello last night: Mignon Clyburn, Shashrina Thomas, Ashley Hayes, Katreice Banks, Lance Mangum, Jamie Gillespie, Erik Huey, Gerry Harrington, De'Ana Dow, Larry Duncan and G.K. Butterfield. — Thailand hosted a reception for the House Chiefs of Staff Association yesterday evening in Georgetown, where representatives from 10 Southeast Asian countries joined 70 chiefs of staff for karaoke and Asian food. Thai Ambassador Suriya Chindawongse sang 'Apt.' by Rosé and Bruno Mars as the first song. SPOTTED: Singaporean Ambassador Lui Tuck Yew, Philippine Ambassador Jose Manuel Romualdez, Mitchell Rivard, Heather Swift, Michelle Dorothy, Zach Weidlich, Mark Dreiling, Nikki Wallace, Mary Rosado, Jaryn Emhof, Rick Jakious, Tasia Jackson, Jeremy Marcus, Chloe Hunt, Drew Ross, Jo Stiles, Marcus Garza, Blake Nolan and Liz Amster. — SPOTTED at a 'YouTube in Session' event at Union Station bringing together policymakers and YouTube creators for discussions: Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Rep. Josh Riley (D-N.Y.), Emily Jashinsky, Hannah Akey, Nathan Brand, Cooper Reves, Michael Comer, Earnestine Dawson, Hunter Koski, Zachari Levy, Billy McLaughlin, Tizzy Brown, Stephanie Chambless, J.P. Freire and Hannah Eddins. — SPOTTED at a launch party for Alex Swoyer's new book, 'Lawless Lawfare: Tipping the Scales of Justice to Get Trump and Destroy MAGA' ($18.04), at Butterworth's last night, also hosted by Post Hill Press publisher Anthony Ziccardi: Mike Davis (who wrote the foreword), Harmeet Dhillon, Kenny Cunningham, Raheem Kassam, Jesse Binnall, Curt Levey, Chris Dolan, Stephen Dinan, Bradley Jaye, Matt Boyle, Charlie Spiering, Otto Heck, Dante Swallow, Brigid Mary McDonnell, Eric Branstad, James Rockas and Julia Pollak. TRANSITIONS — Hale Diamond is now creative director for Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas). She previously was comms director for Rep. Tim Kennedy (D-N.Y.) and is a House Transportation and Infrastructure Dems alum. … Robert Shapiro is now a partner in Dechert's financial services practice group. He was previously assistant chief counsel in the division of investment management at the SEC. … Eric Lipka is now speechwriter for Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.). He previously was Pennsylvania deputy press secretary on the Harris campaign and is an Elizabeth Warren alum. … … Jonas Edwards-Jenks is now a VP with BerlinRosen's impact practice. He was previously comms director at End Citizens United. … Ariel Hayes is joining the Democratic Association of Secretaries of State as executive director. She previously ran the national political department at the Sierra Club. … Will Boyington is now associate administrator for comms at NASA. He previously was director of external comms at Blue Origin. Send Playbookers tips to playbook@ or text us on Signal here. Playbook couldn't happen without our editor Zack Stanton, deputy editor Garrett Ross and Playbook Podcast producer Callan Tansill-Suddath.
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
This Energy Infrastructure Company Boasts Stable Cash Flows and Solid Dividends
Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) is one of the 12 Best Natural Gas Stocks to Buy According to Analysts. Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) makes its money typically by charging fees for use of the capacity of its pipelines, terminals, and other assets. The company boasts very stable cash flows, as around 95% of its earnings come from predictable sources like take-or-pay agreements, fee-based contracts, or commodity price hedges. Aerial view of an oil and gas pipeline, spanning vast landscapes. Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) maintains a robust balance sheet, ending Q1 2025 with a Net Debt-to-Adjusted EBITDA ratio of 4.1 times. It also generated cash flow from operations of $1.2 billion and $0.4 billion in free cash flow after capital expenditures. The company is targeting to generate about $5.9 billion in cash flow from operations this year, up 5% from 2024. Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) remains committed to its shareholders and paid dividends of around $650 million in the first quarter of 2025. The company recently announced a quarterly dividend of $0.2925 per share for Q1, up 2% YoY and marking the eighth straight year that Kinder Morgan has increased its payouts. With an annual dividend yield of 4.18%, KMI was recently included in our list of the 10 Energy Stocks with Fat Dividends. Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) is one of the largest energy infrastructure companies in North America. With approximately 66,000 miles of pipelines, the company transports approximately 40% of the natural gas produced in the United States. While we acknowledge the potential of KMI as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 10 Best Nuclear Energy Stocks to Buy Right Now and Disclosure: None. Sign in to access your portfolio


New York Post
28 minutes ago
- New York Post
Trump calls out Putin as ‘misguided,' says US could send Ukraine Patriot missile systems
President Trump took a rare dig at his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, following this week's NATO summit in the Netherlands before telling a Ukrainian reporter that 'we're going to see' if Washington is able to supply Patriot missile systems and munitions to assist Kyiv in its war against Moscow's invasion. 'I know one thing: He'd like to settle, he'd like to get out of this thing. It's a mess for him,' Trump told reporters in The Hague before departing the two-day gathering of Western leaders. 'I consider him a person that's, I think, been misguided. I'm very surprised, actually. I thought we would have had that settled.' Advertisement Gray TV reporter Jon Decker had pressed Trump about whether he views Russia as an adversary or whether he believes that the Kremlin has its sights set on territory beyond Ukraine. 4 Russian President Vladimir Putin, pictured Monday during a meeting with the interim president of Mali. Getty Images 'It's possible. I mean, it's possible,' Trump replied to the latter question. Advertisement Despite some of his high-profile dustups with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Trump also admitted that Putin was the 'more difficult' leader to engage. 'Vladimir Putin has been more difficult. Frankly, I've had some problems with Zelensky,' Trump told reporters when asked about his campaign pledge to end the war in 24 hours. 'It's been more difficult than other wars.' Trump also showed empathy for BBC Ukraine correspondent Myroslava Petsa after she asked the president 'whether or not the US is ready to sell anti-air missile systems to Ukraine.' 'We know that Russia has been pounding Ukraine really heavily right now,' she added. Advertisement Before addressing her question, Trump asked Petsa: 'Are you living there, yourself, now?' 4 President Trump listens to a question from BBC Ukraine reporter Myroslava Petsa (below) following the NATO Summit at The Hague in the The Netherlands. instagram/saintjavelin 'My husband is there now,' she said. 'And me with the kids, I'm in Warsaw [Poland], actually. Because he wanted me to.' Advertisement The visibly moved Trump responded, 'wow, that's amazing,' before asking whether Petsa's husband was 'a soldier,' which she confirmed. 'Wow, that's rough stuff, right?' he told the reporter. 'That's tough.' Trump then went on to affirm that Kyiv wants to buy the weapons from the US — and pledged that 'we're going to see if we can make some available.' 'You know, they're very hard to get. We need them too,' the president said. 'We were supplying them to Israel, and they're very effective — 100% effective. Hard to believe how effective. And they do want that more than any other thing, as you probably know.' 'That's very good question, and I wish you a lot of luck,' Trump told Petsa. 'I mean, I can see it's very upsetting to you.' Trump has been growing impatient with Putin, lashing out in response to some of Russia's most brutal attacks on Ukraine — such as a barrage of 300 drone and missile attacks last month, which prompted the president to rip the Russian leader as 'crazy.' Still, the administration has been reticent about ratcheting up sanctions on Russia, despite a growing push from Congress to do so. 'If we did what everybody here wants us to do, and that is come in and crush them with more sanctions, we probably lose our ability to talk to them about the cease-fire, and then who's talking to them?' Secretary of State Marco Rubio told Politico in an interview on the sidelines of the summit. Advertisement 4 President Trump, right, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky shake hands during their meeting at the NATO Summit Wednesday. UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL PRESS SERVICE/AFP via Getty Images Trump met with Zelensky earlier Wednesday, after which the the Ukrainian leader said he 'congratulated President Trump on the successful operation in the Middle East.' 'It is important that the US actions have weakened not only their nuclear program but also their drone production capabilities. We will continue to keep an eye on the situation,' he said. 'We discussed the protection of our people with the president — first and foremost, the purchase of American air defense systems to shield our cities, our people, churches, and infrastructure,' Zelensky explained in a readout. 'Ukraine is ready to buy this equipment and support American weapons manufacturers. Europe can help. We also discussed the potential for co-production of drones. We can strengthen each other.'