More good news on the tax front.  Senator John Thune (R-SD) has filed an amendment making permanent two key S corporation reforms.  Joined by Senators Ben Cardin (D-MD) and Pat Roberts (R-KS), the Thune amendment would make permanent the shorter, five-year recognition period for built-in gains as well as an improved basis adjustment for charitable contributions by S corporations.

The text of the amendment is identical to the text of H.R. 4453 and H.R. 4454, legislation sponsored by Representatives Dave Reichert (R-WA) and Ron Kind (D-WI) that passed the Ways & Means Committee earlier this month and are due to be considered by the House of Representatives in coming weeks.

As with the Reichert/Kinds bills, a large coalition of business organizations wrote in support of the Thune amendment.  The letter, signed by the American Trucking Association, the Associated Builders and Contractors, the S Corporation Associations, and twenty-one other organizations, closes, “On behalf of America’s Main Street business community, we respectfully ask that you support the Thune amendment and permanently extend the 5-year recognition period for built-in gains.”

The Thune/Cardin amendment would makes changes to the tax extenders package currently being considered by the Senate, That package already includes two-year extensions of the BIG and charitable provisions, but it faces an uncertain future.  Earlier reports suggested Republicans would vote en bloc against closing out debate to protest their on-going inability to offer amendments on the Senate floor.

The latest news, however, suggests that Republicans may support closing debate in order to ensure that the extender package keeps moving through the legislative process.  As National Journal reported earlier today:

Usually when Majority Leader Harry Reid prevents Republicans from offering amendments, GOP senators block the underlying bill. At least, that was how Republicans handled the recently dispatched energy-efficiency bill, which went down earlier this week.

“There’s probably a lot more support among Republicans for tax extenders than there perhaps was for energy efficiency,” said Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the chamber’s No. 3 Republican.

The difference, according to lawmakers, is that some of the roughly 60 provisions in the tax-extenders package benefit constituents in some way. Thune also said that members view extending current tax policy differently than they do enacting new energy legislation.

“I just think you’re talking about tax policy,” Thune said. “You’re talking about extending tax policy. And many of them are things that our members are supportive of.”

The tax provisions that expired at the end of 2013 are extremely popular with the business community and, now that tax reform has been set aside, the only real opportunity to see them extended would be for the House and the Senate to come together on a package and send it to the President.  With strong leadership in both the House and the Senate, these two S corporation provisions are well positioned to be part of that package.