The House on Thursday passed its version of a tax bill, largely along party lines. Every Democrat voted no, but so did 13 Republicans, many of whom represent districts in high-tax states that could be particularly hurt by the repeal of the state and local income tax deduction.

H.R.1 – Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Yes No Not voting Republicans 227 13 0 Democrats 0 192 2 Total 227 205 2

The Senate is working on its own tax bill, and Republicans say they hope to pass a reconciled version through both chambers by the end of the year.

Republicans Who Represent High-Tax Districts

Most of the Republicans who voted no represent districts with a high average state and local tax deduction, which would be scaled back significantly under the House plan. Taxpayers would no longer be able to deduct state and local income and sales taxes, and the property tax deduction would be limited to $10,000.

District Representative Average state and local deduction Share taking the deduction Yes No NJ-7 Leonard Lance $ 21,276 46 % Y N NJ-11 Rodney Frelinghuysen $ 20,124 42 % Y N NY-2 Peter T. King $ 20,111 48 % Y N CA-48 Dana Rohrabacher $ 18,200 37 % Y N CA-45 Mimi Walters $ 18,200 37 % Y N NY-1 Lee Zeldin $ 17,686 46 % Y N NJ-4 Christopher H. Smith $ 16,912 45 % Y N CA-25 Steve Knight $ 16,723 33 % Y N CA-49 Darrell Issa $ 16,524 35 % Y N CA-39 Ed Royce $ 15,575 33 % Y N MN-3 Erik Paulsen $ 15,021 40 % Y N IL-6 Peter Roskam $ 14,830 38 % Y N IL-14 Randy Hultgren $ 14,453 43 % Y N CA-23 Kevin McCarthy $ 14,370 29 % Y N NY-11 Dan Donovan $ 13,769 36 % Y N VA-10 Barbara Comstock $ 13,562 49 % Y N PA-6 Ryan A. Costello $ 13,218 40 % Y N MN-6 Tom Emmer $ 13,123 39 % Y N PA-8 Brian Fitzpatrick $ 13,090 44 % Y N CA-50 Duncan Hunter $ 12,808 34 % Y N NY-19 John J. Faso $ 12,501 31 % Y N NE-2 Don Bacon $ 12,484 33 % Y N PA-7 Patrick Meehan $ 12,456 38 % Y N NY-24 John Katko $ 12,140 29 % Y N NY-27 Chris Collins $ 12,125 29 % Y N NJ-3 Tom MacArthur $ 11,987 43 % Y N NY-21 Elise Stefanik $ 11,865 23 % Y N CA-4 Tom McClintock $ 11,802 36 % Y N Source: Government Finance Officers Association

The changes in the bill would primarily hurt higher-income taxpayers who deduct more than the higher proposed standard deduction ($12,000 for single filers and $24,000 for married couples) and those who currently deduct more than $10,000 in property taxes.

How Each House Member Voted