Money | Senate Congress Drops Tax Hike for Private Equity Superwealthy investors will get to keep tax breaks they now enjoy By Peter Fearon Posted Oct 9, 2007 12:39 PM CDT Copied Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev., takes part in a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Aug. 3, 2007. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook) (Associated Press) A proposed tax hike on some of America's wealthiest investors isn't likely to happen this year, as Senate Democrats say they're shelving a bill that would have eliminated the special tax rate enjoyed by private-equity managers. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says a crowded legislative calendar makes considering the bill—the object of a massive lobbying effort—impossible, the Washington Post reports. The bill would have doubled the tax rate for private-equity managers, whose profits are taxed at a 15% capital-gains rate, rather than the 35% rate paid on regular income. Given the hundreds of millions many of them earn, it would have raised $6 billion a year in federal revenue, the Post estimates. Read These Next MTG says she 'never fit in' in DC, and will resign in January. This time, it wasn't a bird that hit a plane. Trump: No, 'I'm not threatening death' to Democrats. White House addresses Trump's 'piggy' remark to reporter. Report an error