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The New Republican Class War: State Tax Hikes on the Poor to Fund Tax Cuts for the Rich
The idea of surrender after losing a defining battle is usually the course of wisdom to save the vanquished from annihilation, and one certainly would not expect the losing side to continue hostilities after a defeat and especially when the odds are stacked against them. After Republicans waged a class war against the people on behalf of the wealthy for two years, it seemed likely they would cease attacking the least fortunate Americans after being defeated in the November election, but apparently they decided to continue their class war by engaging the people in a new theatre; in states with Republican governors and legislatures. After the election, Republicans like Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal said his party had to appear friendlier to all the people to avoid the appearance of being the party of the one percent, but actions speak louder than a pleasant demeanor, and Republicans are still waging class war against poor Americans to benefit the rich.
The new front in the Republicans class war is just getting underway as Louisiana, Virginia, and Kansas governors are proposing new tax schemes that raise taxes on the poor to fund tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations. The idea of making the wealthy richer at the expense of the poor is not new, but instead of just cutting services and giving the savings to the rich as tax cuts, Republicans are following an ALEC-inspired tactic of “broadening the tax base” that is code for taxing the poor to pay the wealthy and corporations. Throughout the past year, Congressional Republicans Mitch McConnell and Eric Cantor suggested taxing those Americans struggling for basic survival and reducing rates for the wealthy, but they had little chance of success in a Democratic Senate or surviving President Obama’s veto pen. However, states with Republican governors and legislatures do not have constraints on their Draconian measures and are moving forward with ALEC’s plan to give the rich and corporations relief from what they label burdensome tax liabilities.
Jindal’s tax scheme typifies the ALEC model of broadening the tax base by totally eliminating income tax that corporations and the rich oppose, while increasing sales tax that inordinately affects the poor. It is a simple scam that, on first blush, seems innocuous and fair for all, but like anything ALEC proposes, it is for the express purpose of providing entitlements for the wealthiest Americans. It is still class war, but with a slightly different means to a predictable Republican end; more income inequality, more poverty, and more wealth for Republicans’ favorite benefactors, the rich and corporations.
According to an analysis by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, Jindal’s plan increases taxes on the bottom 80 percent of Louisianans, while cutting them for the richest 1 percent by repealing personal and corporate income taxes and replacing them with a higher sales tax. In Jindal’s plan, the poorest 20 percent of taxpayers, those with poverty level income of $12,000 annually, would see an average tax increase of 3.4 percent of their income, and the top 1 percent with an average income of well over $1 million would get an average tax cut of 2.3 percent of their income. Increasing the sales tax disproportionately affects poverty level Americans because the lion’s share of their meager income is spent on basic living expenses as opposed to the rich whose enormous wealth makes the share of taxable expenditures incredibly lower. Jindal is not the only ALEC devotee implementing higher sales taxes that hurt the poor as Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell is taking a similar approach to burden the poor.
McDonnell is touring Virginia promoting a plan to eliminate Virginia’s gas tax and replace it with an expanded sales tax that McDonnell says fixes the state’s dysfunctional transportation funding system, but it makes Virginia’s regressive tax system even worse; for the poor. McDonnell’s plan increases state sales tax that will hurt poverty level households whose share of income buying basic necessities of life like clothing, toiletries, and school supplies higher putting them deeper in poverty. Virginia’s current tax system is already tilted in favor of the richest 1 percent who pay a 5.2 percent effective tax rate, while Virginians making less than $19,000 pay 8.8 percent, and McDonnell’s plan would raise those rates, but in a way that broadens the gap between what the richest and poorest Virginians are paying in taxes. His plan also shifts the responsibility for funding Virginia’s highways from people who most use the roads and highways, including tourists, to poorer residents who are hardly affording a poverty existence, but that has been the goal of the Republican war on the least fortunate for years.
Similar ALEC schemes are being promoted by Governor Sam Brownback in Kansas, Governor Dave Heineman of Nebraska, and Republicans in North Carolina as a way to burden the poor to enrich the wealthy and their precious corporations. This new line of attack on the poor is an ambitious experiment in tax reform that could spread to the national level in the Republican’s never-ending attempt to aggressively cut personal and corporate income taxes for the wealthiest Americans at the expense of the poorest Americans. The ALEC scheme of “an economically efficient tax system with a sensible, broad tax base and a low tax rate” is a Republicans’ dream because “broad tax base” is code for tax the poor and reduce rates for the rich and corporations. ALEC sells the scam as a way states with Republicans in charge can increase wealth and create jobs, but facts (as usual) belie their claim and only create more wealth for the rich and corporations.
In a 2012 report, “Selling Snake Oil to the States: The American Legislative Exchange Council’s Flawed Prescriptions for Prosperity,” the authors conclude actual data finds Alec’s recommendations not only fail to predict positive results for state economies, the policies they endorse actually forecast worse state outcomes for job creation and paychecks. Why? Because when Americans struggling in a recovering economy and those barely subsisting on poverty level incomes have more of their income taken to support the rich and corporations, they spend less, and less spending means less revenue for business and less hiring. However, the rich and their corporations profit from lower taxes and the Republican cycle of economic despair continues without end as states face reduced revenue that results in defunding public goods such as education, assistance to the needy, and infrastructure improvements which play a major role in economic development for all the people; something so averse to Republicans and their mastermind ALEC, that they have embraced a new class war tactic.
The 2012 election should have been a wakeup call to Republicans that the American people will not abide being assaulted and driven deeper into poverty to enrich the wealthy elite and their corporations, but old habits die hard. At least Republicans have stopped their deeply entrenched abhorrence of tax increases of any sort, but they are still the party that will cut taxes for the rich and corporations to, as McConnell and Cantor said, unburden the job creators by “broadening the tax base” by increasing taxes on working families and those who can least afford it; the poor.
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djchefron(Moderator)
Jan. 29th, 2013 at 10:40 am
It was asked do the republican party think people are stupid?The answer is yes.They do think their base is stupid.
No matter what evidence is presented to them they refuse to believe it.Its like holocaust deniers.”No that cant be true,it never could have happen.
I love it when they come on here and say President Obama is taxing me to death.Nevermind that taxes are at their lowest levels in 60 years
economix.blogs.nytimes.co...
When ask has your federal income tax has gone up?Crickets.
My next favorite is the “takers”people are lazy, dont want to work.In other words them coloreds are taking my money.Funny thing is the states with the highest disability claims are red states
www.offthechartsblog.org/...
If you dig deeper you find that its not illegal aliens that causing it.Surpriseingly its states with low educated population.Hmm you say how do the states rank
datacenter.kidscount.org/...
Looks like a lot of red states at the bottom.Cause and effect?
All we can do is present the evidence that if you want to live like a republican vote democrat
Sugapea
Jan. 29th, 2013 at 2:41 pm
Djchefron, You’re absolutely right!
The Pubs are counting on their State Republican folks to trust their scams and follow blindly!
It was George W.Bush who once let it slip out when he said:
“We can fool some of the people all of the time…and those are the ones we concentrate on”!
We should thank God there are Republican voter’s reading here! If they would only do research on the facts/links provided in ‘Brilliant Articles’ on PoliticUSA…they would see we are telling them the truth! Their Republican Leaders are taking advantage of them to further enrich the already rich at the top. More, more for the wealthy, the Richest American’s who are now paying *THE LOWEST TAX RATE IN OVER 60-YEARS*.
i158.photobucket.com/albu...
Jennifer
Jan. 29th, 2013 at 1:21 pm
For this reason & others I’m not a ‘consumer’ the way they want people to be. I shop online & at flea markets & garage sales where you don’t get charged sales tax.
This year I’ll begin building a self contained, solar powered tiny house on wheels so I won’t have to pay a mortgage or outrageous property taxes. I’ll also have less space to fill up with crap I don’t need!
I ride a bike for transportation & plan on going to bike mechanic training courses & will eventually own a small repair & rental business.
Screw the ‘american dream’… I’m chasing my own dreams of self sufficiency & being the master of my own life & the way I spend my time!
Moongal6
Jan. 29th, 2013 at 2:55 pm
“The modern conservative is engaged in one of man’s oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness.”
John Kenneth Galbraith
majii
Jan. 29th, 2013 at 9:41 pm
It seems that many republicans in red states have been persuaded to believe that the rich and corporations are better than anyone on the planet, including themselves and their families. This has led them to elect these corporatist governors whose main interest is in further enriching the wealthy and giving more power to corporations over the lives of the citizens. This is the whole scheme behind the “right to work” laws and the “flat” tax. These people are voting against their own interests, and won’t utter one word in protest, simply because these politicians say a few simple things–”I’m a conservative, I’m pro-life, freedom, and I’m for small government. It doesn’t matter that invading women’s reproductive systems is the opposite of small government, that there’s nothing more regressive than a tax that makes it more difficult for the poor to meet their needs, that what these republican rank and filers to believe to be conservatism is really corporatism, or that giving up workers’ rights to negotiate for better wages and working conditions to corporations is NOT freedom for the workers, but for the corporations, and that there’s nothing pro-life about cutting food and medical assistance for kids and the elderly to give corporations and the wealthy more tax breaks. Rick Perry seems to have lost favor with Texas citizens and so has Corbett in MI, along with Rick Scott in Fl, and Scott Walker in WI. I have no sympathy for those who voted these politicians into office in 2010 and are now disappointed with them. It’s their fault for not doing the requisite research before voting for them. They bought pigs in pokes, and now, they’re stuck with them and can only watch as they slowly erode their freedoms and turn their states over to be run by the wealthy and corporations.
Brotherdoc
Jan. 30th, 2013 at 4:45 pm
NC should be included. Now that the GOP is in control of both houses of the legislature and the governorship, the UNC system is under attack,a billion in spending is to be cut from the budget (not of course by reducing corporate subsidies or tax breaks), and the sales taxes will likely rise, which are the most regressive. The poor will be hit hardest, but of course they are the most righteous and will cheer the new restrictions on abortion.