S.1558 - Keeping Our Social Security Promises Act
A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to apply payroll taxes to remuneration and earnings from self-employment up to the contribution and benefit base and to remuneration in excess of $250,000.
view all titles (2)
This Bill currently has no wiki content. If you would like to create a wiki entry for this bill, please Login, and then select the wiki tab to create it.
Bill's Views
- Today: 1
-
Past Seven Days: 8
- All-Time: 1,273
Official Summary
9/14/2011--Introduced.Keeping Our Social Security Promises Act - Amends the Internal Revenue Code to apply employment and self-employment taxes to remuneration up to the contribution and benefit base and to remuneration in excess of $250,000.
Latest Letters to Congress
-
S.1558 Keeping Our Social Security Promises Act
khartley
December 02, 2012
I am writing as your constituent in the 2nd Congressional district of New Mexico.
I am writing as your constituent in the 2nd Congressional district of New Mexico. I support S.1558 - Keeping Our Social Security Promises Act, and am tracking it using OpenCongress.org, the free public resource website for government transparency and accountability.
The people of these United States are no longer asleep. We know Congress has borrowed money from Social Security. We know cuts to Social Securit...
-
S.1558 Keeping Our Social Security Promises Act
sheme
November 08, 2012
I am writing as your constituent in the 2nd Congressional district of West Virginia. I am writing as your constituent in the 2nd Congressional district of West Virginia. I support S.1558 - Keeping Our Social Security Promises Act, and am tracking it using OpenCongress.org, the free public resource website for government transparency and accountability.
Sincerely,
Sheila O'neal
-
S.1558 Keeping Our Social Security Promises Act
AGITMZach
December 05, 2011
I am writing as your constituent in the 6th Congressional district of Maryland. I support S.1558 - Keeping Our Social Security Promises Act, and am tracking it using OpenCongress.org, the free public resource website for government transparency and accountability.
Sincerely,
Zachary Mills
See All Letters (6)