On Sunday evening, the Republican-misled Kansas Senate passed a 471 million dollar tax increase.
If the measure passes the Kansas House on Monday and is then signed
into law by Sam Brownback, it will become the largest tax
increase in Kansas’ history.
Senate support for the tax increase is a clear sign
that the Brownback tax cuts that were supposed to stimulate the economy,
have failed so miserably, that even teabagger Republicans have resigned
themselves to supporting a massive tax increase. However, the Senate
did not opt to restore higher income tax rates for the wealthy, but
instead they decided to fill the state’s gaping budget hole by raising
regressive taxes which pass the burden onto the poor.
The Senate bill,
which passed on a close 21-17 vote, would raise the state sales tax
from 6.15 percent to 6.55 percent. The cigarette tax would jump from .79
cents a pack to a 1.29 a pack. The measure would also lower deductions
for property taxes, charitable contributions and home mortgage interest.
The bill protects the zero income tax rate for many owners of limited-liability companies, corporate farms and large corporations. However, it eliminates sales tax rebates on food for poor families, the elderly and people with disabilities.
So while Senate Republicans have finally come to
grips with the failure of the Brownback tax cuts, their solution is not
to make billionaires like Charles Koch, who still claims residency in
Wichita, pay a higher tax rate. Instead they have decided to tackle the
state’s budget crisis by raising the price of food for the poor,
disabled and elderly.
What voters in Kansas, and across the nation, need
to recognize is that the Republican Party is not so much committed to
cutting taxes, as they are to protecting the wealth and privilege for
the people at the top of the income pyramid. Republican rhetoric about
cutting taxes is often interpreted by voters as a signal that GOP
politicians will cut their taxes. However, when tax
cuts fail to stimulate the growth that was promised, Republicans will
try to plug the gap by squeezing every last penny from the people
without money, before they dare ask rich people to pay their fair share.
If
the Senate bill becomes law, low and middle-income Republican voters in
Kansas will become the proud owners of an “anti-tax Governor and
anti-tax legislature” that passed the largest tax increase in the
state’s history. To add insult to injury, they will also have the
dubious honor of paying for that tax increase so that the state’s
aristocracy can keep their precious tax cuts. If not for the fact that
some of those people will endure real suffering, the whole charade would
be almost comical.
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