Home

Blog

How People Voted

27% For, 73% Against

Take Action

Alert Your Friends and Colleagues
Write Your Representative in Congress
Save & Share
del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Google
Reddit
Yahoo!

S. 2519, The Contracting and Tax Accountability Act of 2007

  • This item is from the 110th Congress (2007-2008) and is no longer current. Comments, voting, and wiki editing have been disabled, and the cost/savings estimate has been frozen.

Version saved on December 20, 2007, 18:30:14, by webmaster:

S. 2519 would prohibit the awarding of a contract or grant in excess of the simplified acquisition threshold unless the prospective contractor or grantee certifies in writing to the agency awarding the contract or grant that the contractor or grantee has no seriously delinquent tax debts.

Detailed Summary

(Log in to edit the wiki and be the first to provide a detailed summary of the bill!)

Status of the Legislation

Latest Major Action: 12/19/2007: Referred to Senate committee. Status: Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

Points in Favor

(Log in to edit the wiki and be the first to show why the bill should pass!)

Points Against

(Log in to edit the wiki and be the first to show why the bill should not pass!)

« Return to Revision History.



From the Blog

Senator Obama’s Priorities

As we’ve done with Republican presidential candidate Senator John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic vice presidential candidate Senator Joseph Biden (D-DE), this week we take a look at the legislative activities of Senator Barack Obama, (D-IL), the De...

Visitor Comments Comments Feed for This Bill

Chris

April 23, 2008, 11:33pm (report abuse)

Private contracting companies in Iraq, some with no-bid contracts, are pulling a double rip-off: raking in money on their contracts with nearly no oversight, while at the same time dodging paying their fair share of taxes. War profiteering is bad enough. The least they should be required to do is pay their taxes like the rest of us do instead of setting up off-shore entities to avoid payroll taxes. This bill won't cost ordinary citizens anything -- it will save us money by making these companies like Halliburton spin-off Kellogg, Brown, and Root, and thousands of other tax-dodging contractors pay their fair share.

RSS Feeds for This Bill

Keep yourself updated on user contributions and debates about this bill! (Learn more about RSS.)