Posted on 06/09/2005 7:18:55 PM PDT by Flora McDonald
The politicians are poised to raise your taxes again. By voting for anti-tax candidates in the GOP primary, you can send a message: We insist that state government do better.
In all likelihood, you're not going to bother voting June 14 in either the Republican or Democratic Party primaries. Like most of your fellow citizens, you probably figure the top spots -- Jerry Kilgore for the GOP and Tim Kaine for the Demos -- are a lock. And you haven't been paying very close attention to the other races, so you really don't care who gets nominated.
That would be a shame. If history is any indication, voter turnout will be so dismally low that your single vote will carry as much weight as four or five votes in, say, a presidential election. What's more, there's actually a lot to get fired up about.
One way or another, the outcome of this primary season will be seen as a validation of, or rejection of, the decision by Gov. Mark R. Warner and the 2004 General Assembly to raise taxes by an estimated $1.5 billion per biennial budget. State senators aren't up for re-election this year, but anti-tax partisans swore vengeance against 17 Republicans who broke ranks with the GOP majority in the House of Delegates to back the tax hike.
I fear that 2005 will go down as a watershed year when the Virginia political class learned that it can jack up taxes with impunity. Think about it: Legislators enacted a record tax increase in 2004 that turned out to be largely unneeded. This year, they treated citizens to the spectacle of carving up a billion-dollar budget surplus without returning one dime of it to the taxpayers. Now, emboldened, the state senate is laying the groundwork to raise taxes by at least another $1 billion per year ($2 billion per biennium) to fund transportation. Meanwhile, against this backdrop of state spending, local governments have used soaring real estate assessments to pocket ever higher tax revenues themselves.
Never in modern Virginia history--probably not since the old Confederacy tried to sustain four years of total war--has the Old Dominion witnessed such a splurge of spending and taxes. Yet the populace remains supine. The anti-taxers mustered only seven candidates to run against the pro-tax incumbents. Although it's conceivable that the challengers' youthful enthusiasm may make up for their lack of experience, connections and cash, they are all fighting uphill battles. At the same time, the most forceful fiscal conservative running for statewide office, George Fitch, can barely get his name in print. His campaign against Jerry Kilgore has never caught fire.
Unless something extraordinary and unexpected happens at the polls, the insurgents will be quelled, and a new Conventional Wisdom will arise: Virginians are willing to pay higher taxes. And, as surely as the earth circles around the sun, legislators will oblige them. The list of "unmet needs" and of petitioners to articulate them stretches to the moon and beyond.
Those who favor higher taxes characterize anti-tax partisans as unsophisticated rubes -- peasants with pitchforks -- whose passions, though perhaps understandable, are volatile and misdirected. In the cleverest formulation of this sentiment, fellow Bacon's Rebellion columnist Barnie Day refers to them as "cold fusion" Republicans, who would conjure money from nothing to pay for all the state's pressing needs, or "flat earth" Republicans who are so obtuse they will believe anything.
If politics were no more than battling bumper stickers, I might characterize the pro-tax forces as the "Tax First, Ask Questions Later" crowd. But that wouldn't be quite accurate, for it implies that pro-tax politicians occasionally do question their basic suppositions, which, in my experience, they do not. From what I could glean, the billion-dollar budget surplus didn't prompt the slightest soul searching over the question of whether the previous year's tax tax increase in any way overdone. Far from revising their fiscal assumptions, Virginia's lawmakers conducted themselves much the same as my seven-year-old son's birthday companions last week when, after battering it repeatly, they finally ruptured the Sponge Bob pinata: Swarming like mice from all corners of the pavilion, children threw themselves greedily upon the candy on the floor.
In truth, the pro-tax advocates are the rubes, for they share the children's view of the world as a zero-sum game. Politicians scramble for the finite supply of Sponge Bob candy on the floor, impervious to the thought that all might benefit if they could only grow the size of the pinata--or, more imaginatively, pack it with a tastier assortment of goodies.
The anti-tax movement espouses a more sophisticated view of governance. Contrary to widespread aspersions, tax cutters advance ideas for limiting government spending that don't entail taking chainsaws to Kindergarten teachers or boiling Medicaid patients in oil.
It's critical that we get rid of the tax hiking RINOs on June 14. If you are represented by one of the tax hikers PLEASE make sure you get out and vote, make sure your friends/family vote, and vote for an anti-tax conservative. One other note is that the anti-tax House candidates endorsed by VCAP (found here) are also endorsed by VCDL. If you believe in anti-tax, pro-gun candidates this is a very important next few days.
We've only got a few more days to make a difference. The growth of the budget in the near future could very well be decided on Tuesday.
IIRC the delegates who are pro-tax and anti-gun are also bad on life issues.
As we point out in our book, "A Patriot's History of the United States," in the 19 years after the Revolution, the Republic witnessed three internal revolts . . . all over taxes. Don't tell me taxes aren't important!
VCAP is the best thing to happen to Virginia since sliced bread!
The McDonald's will be campaigning this weekend for one of the RINO challengers.
BTW - We had a good time at the RTM lunch meeting but missed you. I got to show off my new T-Shirt: TIM KAINE THINKS WE TALK FUNNY - TIM KAINE CAN KISS MY GRITS.
I wish I could've made it. Hopefully next time. I even wore my CAPITALISTPIG t-shirt yesterday.......
I have heard good things about your book. It is on my books to buy list.
Most definitely, taxes do matter.
I think you'll find in PHUSA that we, citing solid recent scholarship, show that the income tax amendment was all about redistributing wealth, not raising revenue for the government.
It's also my dad's birthday.
Another reason June 14th is noteworthy!
Senator Potts has attended pro-abort rallies. He's an embarrassment.
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