From Bloomberg  News: 
 
The U.S. Senate’s tax-writing committee  might add $69 billion in relief from the alternative- minimum tax to  the $825 billion economic stimulus proposal.
The provision benefiting more than 30  million households, primarily with incomes between $100,000 and $500,000,  will be considered as an amendment to $272 billion in tax cuts being  drafted today by the Senate Finance Committee as part of the broader  stimulus plan.
Inclusion of alternative-minimum tax  relief would swell the stimulus plan’s tax cuts, which so far are  anchored to President Barack Obama’s campaign promise to give workers  a tax cut of up to $1,000 by reducing Social Security payroll taxes.  The Obama administration urged exclusion of the AMT provision when the  House drafted its stimulus bill, House Ways and Means Committee Charles  Rangel said last week.
Obama visited the Capitol today to seek  support for the legislation from House and Senate Republicans. Before  his arrival, House Minority Leader John Boehner and House Minority Whip  Eric Cantor urged rank-and-file members at a closed-door meeting to  vote against the plan unless more tax relief is added, said a Republican  leadership aide.
The AMT amendment is one of as many as  226 under consideration for the tax legislation, which would ease tax  burdens on businesses by $128.1 billion this year and next. Another  part of the bill would let companies convert losses into tax refunds  and provide new relief from taxes due on the value of forgiven corporate  debt.