Guest
Contributor
Carol Ross Evans
Carol
Evans is vice president of the California Taxpayers’ Association.
A
Blank Check for Higher Taxes
The deception
of Proposition 56
[Carol Ross Evans] 2/26/04
If you’re
one of those people who’s always complaining
that taxes are just too darn low, and who can’t wait
to write those tax checks every April 15 – here’s
some good news. This year, you won’t have to wait. You
can help raise taxes now, by voting for Proposition 56 on March
2.
That’d be the “take my wallet, please” proposition
that would make it easier for the Legislature to raise state
taxes. Proposition 56 would eliminate the requirement in the
state Constitution that all tax increases and all new taxes must
be approved by a two-thirds vote of the Legislature.
If Proposition 56 passes, the door is open to higher income
taxes, higher sales taxes, even higher property taxes (through
a statewide parcel tax). Any and every state tax would be that
much easier to increase.
Of course that’s not how the people behind Proposition
56 talk about it. No, they call this “budget accountability” and
to prove it, they’ve put in penalties for our elected officials
if they don’t pass the state budget on time.
By itself, that would
be a good idea. Sacramento needs a dose of real accountability.
But giving even more money to the same
people who’ve spent us into a deficit already, by making
it easier for politicians to raise our taxes – that’s
like giving an alcoholic free run of the bar. The last thing
Sacramento needs now is a blank check drawn on the people of
California.
That’s why the California Taxpayers’ Association,
the California Taxpayer Protection Committee, United Californians
for Tax Reform, and the largest coalition of taxpayer groups
ever seen in California, all oppose Proposition 56, the Blank
Check Initiative.
It’s not as if we’ve
been stingy in paying our taxes. Californians already fork
over $130 billion a year in state and
local taxes.
At the same time,
our economy is still struggling to get back on its feet. Many
working families are working harder than ever
just to make ends meet. Many small businesses, which historically
are the engine that drives economic growth, are working hard
just to stay afloat. Opening the door to a flood of higher taxes
is just what we don’t need now.
That’s why the
Blank Check Initiative is also opposed by the Small Business
Survival Committee, California Retailers
Association, the California Restaurant Association, California
Farm Bureau Federation, Associated Builders and Contractors of
California, Family Winemakers of California, National Federation
of Independent Business, Small Manufacturers Association of California,
California Chamber of Commerce and other organizations representing
just about every sort of business still left here in California.
But maybe you’d like to give our politicians in Sacramento
the benefit of the doubt. Just because they can raise taxes,
doesn’t mean they will raise taxes, does it?
We don’t have
a crystal ball, but we do know these things:
Even with the existing two-thirds vote requirement, taxes have
been steadily going up over the last decade.
Last year, the Legislature considered new tax and fee increases
that totaled almost $65 billion.
There’s
nothing, not a single sentence, in Proposition 56 that
does anything
to encourage fiscal restraint, that does
anything to limit spending or that does anything to direct
Sacramento to find any budget solution other than raising
taxes.
(Oh, and we know that nothing is certain but death and taxes.)
The people behind
Proposition 56 are trying to deceive the voters, by dressing
this up as “budget accountability,” and
putting in language to push Sacramento to pass a budget on time.
But they don’t say a word about the single most important
change in their measure, and the real aim of Proposition 56 – elimination
of the two-thirds approval protection against unjustified tax
increases.
Any tax increase should come only after Sacramento has made
a clear accounting for how it spends the money we already pay
in taxes, and only after it makes a compelling case for why more
money is needed. The two-thirds vote gives us that protection.
Getting rid of the two-thirds vote, as Proposition 56 would do,
also gets rid of any need for bipartisan consensus or thoughtful
discussion.
Proposition 56 means higher taxes with no real accountability.
It means a blank check for politicians in Sacramento. It means
tax increases for working families and struggling businesses.
And that means big trouble for California.
Please read this measure carefully, and join us in voting no
on the Blank Check Initiative; no on Proposition 56.
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