Bitcoin and Crypto in the Spotlight as US Congressman Proposes to Abolish the IRS and Reform Tax Code
Amid the IRS growing tax issues with the crypto industry, a US Congressman has filed a bill to decimate the collectors and reform the system.Earl Buddy Carter, a member of the US House representing Georgia, has filed an attention-grabbing bill. On January 9, the Congressman unveiled the Fair Tax Act, H.R. 25, which seeks to reform the US tax code.The proposal suggests dissolving the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and simplifying the taxing process. It also proposes abolishing income, payroll, and estate taxes, which it deems unfair to US taxpayers.A Simplified US Tax Payment SystemThe complexity of the IRS taxing system has become controversial, especially in relation to the nascent crypto industry. Notably, the tax collector has sought to impose dues on staked cryptocurrencies, among other things.Representative Carter mentioned the agency's tax overreach and proposed abolishment. He suggested a simplified national consumption tax system and an end to income, payroll, death, and gift taxes.Meanwhile, Congress and the Senate will deliberate on and pass the proposal if approved. The bill has already been adopted by over 10 Republicans, including John Carter and John Rutherford, Texas and Florida representatives."The Fair Tax is exactly thatfair. It is the only tax proposal out there that is pro-growth, simple, and allows Americans to keep every cent of their hard-earned money while eliminating the need for the IRS altogether," Congressman Carter said.The IRS Faces Further PressureCarter's Fair Tax Act bill adds to the IRS's growing backlash as several bodies express discontent with the agency's operations. For context, the Texas Blockchain Council and Blockchain Association recently sued the tax agency over its proposed tax gains.The proposed crypto law requires that crypto exchanges calculate users' earnings using the FIFO (First In, First Out) accounting rule. The sector has since kicked back, stating that the process is burdensome and infringes on its basic operational system.In the meantime, the IRS has postponed the implementation date to January 1, 2026. The agency intended to effect the law earlier this month but cited unpreparedness among exchanges and other factors as hindrances to the enactment.Moreover, the IRS also has a case with a US couple who challenged the tax collector's insistence on paying taxes on unrealized staking gains. Joshua and Jessica Jarret sued the IRS in October, arguing for the scrap of the liability tax.
Text source: The Crypto Basic