47 of the 53 Kansas lawmakers who signed pledges not to raise taxes, abandoned their pledges by voting for a package of regressive tax increases
that will place a heavy burden on low and middle-income Kansas
residents. The 53 lawmakers had either signed Grover Norquist’s
Americans for Tax Reform no taxes pledge, a similar pledge offered by
the Koch Brother’s Americans for Prosperity or both. By Monday, June
15th, only 6 of the 53 lawmakers had not broken those pledges.
Facing a gaping budget hole created by Sam
Brownback’s fiscally irresponsible income tax cuts, the legislature
discovered that it could not cut its way to solvency. Consequently, the
lawmakers relented and agreed to over 380 million dollars in tax increases, with most of the tax burden falling on poor and middle-class Kansans.
The lawmakers eliminated certain income tax deductions,
and they raised the cigarette tax from 79 cents to 1.29 a pack.
However, the most controversial increase was boosting the state sales
tax from 6.15 percent to 6.5 percent. The legislature also added a 47
million dollar tax on managed care organizations in Kansas.
Democratic leaders criticized the package because it
shifts the tax burden further away from the rich onto the less
affluent. The Republican Cabal’s decision to raise taxes illustrates the failure of
Brownback’s income tax cuts to stimulate economic growth as
promised. However, the Republican “fix” is not likely to improve the
state’s economy since most of the tax cuts for the rich remain intact
while new taxes are assessed on the poor.
The Republican Cabal’s irresponsible policymaking is now common practice. Republican legislators know that the only honest way to fix the state budget crisis is to reverse Brownback’s stupid failed experiment.
The Republican legislators who support this bill are foisting on the people of Kansas the highest, most regressive sales tax on food in the nation.
The bad news for the people of Kansas is that the
Republican tax increases will do nothing to alleviate the suffering of
ordinary Kansans. The silver lining, if there is one, is that Sam
Brownback’s financial emergency has become so severe that Republican
lawmakers have betrayed Grover Norquist and the Koch Brothers. The tax
bill they supported is nothing short of terrible. Nevertheless, by
cutting the puppet strings that held them hostage, the lawmakers have an
opportunity to start making better decisions in the future. Foolish
anti-tax pledges put Kansas on the path to financial ruin. Now that the
pledges are no longer being honored, maybe common sense can slowly
find its way back into Kansas politics.
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