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Tax News & Views IRS Lasagna Roundup

By Trina Pinneau
July 29, 2025

Key Takeaways

  • IRS
  • Tariffs
  • Energy Credits
  • Medicaid Cuts
  • Johnson Amendment
  • In the Courts
  • Lasagna

IRS

IRS warns federal workers about tax debts. Will it cost them their jobs? – Julie Zauzamer Weil & Shannon Najmabadi, Washington Post:

The IRS has sent letters to federal workers alleging that they are among 525,000 current and former government staffers who owe back taxes, prompting tax experts to warn that the unpaid bills could be used as a pretext to fire them from their jobs.

The letters, mailed last month, begin with the words “Urgent: You have an outstanding tax issue,” in bold, large type.

They started arriving in people’s mailboxes shortly after the Office of Personnel Management proposed a rule that would make it easier to dismiss employees who don’t meet certain “suitability criteria,” including “failure to comply with generally applicable legal obligations, including timely filing of tax returns.”

New IRS Chief Rejects 'Wizard Of Oz'-Style Leadership – Kat Lucero, Law 360 ($):

New Internal Revenue Commissioner Billy Long vowed Monday to engage more directly with agency employees to improve taxpayer service, emphasizing that he does not want to be a "Wizard of Oz"-style leader hiding behind a curtain.

Greater engagement with Internal Revenue Service employees, especially those who interact with taxpayers, would improve the workplace and enhance customer service, Long said during an enrolled agents conference in Salt Lake City.

IRS Chief Says Direct File Is ‘Gone,’ Other Audit Tech Is Coming – Erin Slowey, Bloomberg ($):

The Biden-era IRS free filing tool, Direct File, is “gone,” IRS Commissioner Billy Long said.

“You’ve heard of Direct File,” Long said Monday at the National Association of Enrolled Agents Tax Summit, one of his first public appearances since taking the agency’s helm. “That’s gone. Big beautiful Billy wiped that out. I don’t care about Direct File. I care about direct audit.”
Instead of the free filing system that was first piloted in 2024 but has faced fierce GOP opposition, Long said he wants to turn his attention to making it easier for businesses and individuals to see where they are in the process while under audit.

Long Predicts Later Start to Filing Season – Benjamin Valdez, Tax Notes ($):

IRS Commissioner Billy Long said he expects the next filing season to open in February as the agency works to implement the recently enacted tax bill.

Long, speaking during the National Association of Enrolled Agents Tax Summit July 28, said the IRS is aiming to start the 2026 filing season around Presidents Day, which lands on February 17.

 

Tariffs

Who Pays for U.S. Tariffs, and Where Does the Money Go? – New York Times:

Since his return to office, President Trump has set in motion a global trade war, wielding tariffs to try to achieve multiple goals at once: raising federal revenue, reducing or eliminating trade deficits with other nations and compelling manufacturers to make more of their goods in the United States.



The president and his advisers say their goal is to make the tariffs so painful that they force companies to make their products in the United States. They argue that this will create more jobs in America and push up wages.

But Mr. Trump has also described tariffs as an all-purpose tool to extract concessions from other countries. The president also maintains that tariffs will rake in huge sums of revenue that the government can use to pay for domestic tax cuts.

EU, US Rush to Clinch Final Details and Lock in Trade Deal – Jorge Valero, Bloomberg ($):

The European Union dodged an imminent trade war with the US this week, but markets and a growing chorus of critics have dispelled early hopes that the deal will bring a sense of stability back to transatlantic relations.

The euro fell to a five-week low of $1.1527 on Tuesday, having fallen about 1.8% since the trade deal was announced. That’s after the common currency had surged to a near three-year high last week on the prospect of an agreement with the US.

EU-U.S. Tariff Deal Saddles Promised Relief With Open Questions – Sophie Petitjean, Tax Notes ($):

The EU will be subject to a single 15 percent tariff rate for most of its exports to the United States starting August 1 after reaching a deal that is not to everyone's liking.

After months of negotiations and several warning shots from U.S. President Donald Trump, the EU and the United States finally agreed on the main terms of a trade deal July 27. The new relationship includes three main pillars: a single 15 percent tariff ceiling for most EU exports, $750 billion in strategic purchases, and an additional $600 billion in anticipated private investments into the U.S. economy.

Three-Quarters of U.S. Food Imports Under Tariff Pressure – Jonathan Curry, Tax Notes ($). “As the August 1 trade deal deadline rapidly approaches, tariff rates on most imported foods are set to spike, raising the cost of groceries for the average American, the Tax Foundation warned.”

Court Declines US Tariff Relief on Low-Cost Goods, for Now – Zoe Tillman, Bloomberg ($):

A US trade court has for now denied an effort to restore a tariff exemption for small-value packages from China that President Donald Trump ended earlier this year.

The decision from the Court of International Trade on Monday in the fight over what’s known as the “de minimis” tariff exemption is the latest favorable order for the Trump administration in its defense against multiple lawsuits over his move to raise global tariffs.

 

Energy Credits

Trump Cuts Billions as Climate Nonprofits Scramble to Survive – Emma Court & Olivia Raimonde, Bloomberg ($):

If any nonprofit epitomizes the whiplash experienced by climate advocacy groups in the US over the past few years, it’s Rewiring America.

Founded in 2020 shortly before former President Joe Biden was elected, the organization focuses on shifting US homes from fossil fuel-powered appliances to electric ones like heat pumps — a prime goal of Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act when it was passed in 2022. Rewiring America was poised to receive nearly $500 million from a $27 billion program created by that law.

 

Medicaid Cuts

Judge Pauses Medicaid Cuts to All Planned Parenthood Clinics – Celine Castronuovo, Bloomberg ($). “All Planned Parenthood locations are protected for now from sweeping Medicaid cuts in the Trump administration’s tax law under a federal judge’s order Monday expanding a previous injunction that paused enforcement for some affiliates.”

 

Johnson Amendment

IRS Attempting End-Run on Johnson Amendment, Group Says – Kristen A. Parillo, Tax Notes ($):

The IRS and two Texas churches are improperly using a consent decree to destroy the tax code’s ban on political campaign activity by tax-exempt organizations, an advocacy group contends in a court filing.

The proposed consent decree “represents the Parties’ attempt to eliminate the Johnson Amendment through litigation, improperly bypassing Congress,” Americans United for Separation of Church and State (AU) said in a July 25 amicus brief in National Religious Broadcasters v. Long.

 

In the Courts

Trump Hits Court Shopping Roadblock in Federal Union Pact Fights – Jacqueline Thomsen & Parker Purifoy, Bloomberg ($):

The Trump administration is struggling to get immediate wins from its preferred courts, after failing to score them in the legal fights over labor agreements for federal workers.

The administration has now twice lost bids to cancel Biden-era collective bargaining agreements with federal unions. The first lawsuit was filed in the Eastern District of Kentucky, home to all Republican appointees, and was dismissed by Senior US District Judge Danny Reeves, a George W. Bush appointee.
President Donald Trump’s Justice Department was dealt another blow in a ruling last week from US District Judge Alan Albright, a Trump appointee and currently the only district judge hearing cases in Waco, Texas.

Second Circuit Litigant Defends Tax Court on Reporting Penalties – Amanda Athanasiou, Tax Notes ($). “The Tax Court correctly concluded that the IRS can’t assess foreign business information reporting penalties and that the D.C. Circuit’s reasoning to the contrary lacks merit, a taxpayer has told the Second Circuit.”

Trailer Maker's Bid to Escape $4M Excise Taxes Dismissed – Kevin Pinner, Law 360 ($). “A trailer manufacturer can't avoid more than $4 million in excise taxes, interest and penalties, a South Dakota federal court ruled, finding it couldn't rely on an exemption from a technical advice memorandum after Congress altered the definition of off-highway vehicles.”

Fired Worker Owes Tax On $1.5M Settlement, Tax Court Says – Anna Scott Farrell, Law 360 ($). “A former PNC Investments LLC employee who won a defamation settlement after being fired must pay tax on the $1.5 million award, the U.S. Tax Court said Monday, rejecting the ex-worker's argument that the money didn't count as income.”

 

What Day is it?

Get out your pasta machine and your ricotta! Its National Lasagna Day! Hooray!

About the Author(s)

Trina Pinneau photo

Trina Pinneau

Senior Manager
Trina has more than 10 years of public accounting experience providing tax consulting services and analyzing complex tax situations. She has spent the majority of her time in the credits and incentives space with a focus on energy credits and excise taxes. Trina also has experience in tax controversy and accounting methods. In joining Eide Bailly's National Tax Office Trina is focusing her efforts on energy efficiency incentives while being a resource for the excise and tax controversy team.

Any opinions expressed or implied are those of the author and not necessarily those of Eide Bailly. Opinions found in linked items are those of the authors of the linked item, not of your bloggers or of Eide Bailly. “$” means link may be behind a paywall. Items here do not constitute tax advice.