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Voters Speak: No to Soak-the-Rich Schemes

By Michelle Malkin | November 08, 2010 | 11:48

A  A
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Do Americans share President Obama's desire to impose redistributive social justice on the well off? In liberal Washington State, of all places, voters gave a definitive answer this Tuesday: No! The resounding rejection of a punitive "Robin Hood" initiative shows that it's not just red-state Republicans who oppose extreme tax hikes on the nation's wealth generators.

As Capitol Hill resumes debate on whether to extend the so-called "Bush tax cuts," the White House should pay special heed to the fate of little-noticed Initiative 1098. Its defeat by a whopping 65-35 margin doesn't bode well for Team Obama's class warriors still clinging bitterly to their soak-the-rich schemes. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner insisted this summer that saddling higher earners with higher taxes was "the responsible thing to do." Given the chance to weigh in at the ballot box, a diverse majority of voters in the other Washington determined otherwise.

The Evergreen State is just one of seven states in the nation without a personal income tax. The ballot measure, which would have enacted a state income tax on the wealthiest 1 percent of Washington residents to raise $2 billion for bankrupt public schools, was sponsored by Microsoft founder Bill Gates and his left-wing corporate lawyer father. Top donors? The Service Employees International Union, whose state and national chapters threw in a combined $2.5 million of its members' hard-earned dues money, and the National Education Association, which pitched in nearly $760,000.

Hiding behind kiddie human shields, the I-1098 campaign assailed the wealthy for "not paying their fair share" and plastered their campaign literature with sad-faced students and toddlers. Big Labor has been pushing a punish-the-wealthy movement for months. According to Forbes magazine, "six of the 10 states with the highest income tax rates — Oregon, California, Hawaii, New York, New Jersey and North Carolina — raised their levies on high earners, at least temporarily" last year.

But business owners large and small, representing companies from Bartell Drugs to Amazon.com, successfully fought back against the job-killing measure in Washington State. Disavowing the Gateses, Microsoft honcho Steve Ballmer also joined the opposition. The software company's senior executives expressed grave concern "about the impact I-1098 will have on the state's ability to attract top tech talent in the future." Liberal newspaper editorial boards including the Seattle Times and Tacoma News Tribune added their objections, citing I-1098's reckless targeting of wealth-creation in the middle of a recession and the inevitable extension and increase of income taxes to the middle class. And economists at the independent, nonpartisan Beacon Hill Institute at Suffolk University found that I-1098's tax burdens would lengthen and deepen the current economic downturn by destroying private sector jobs, reducing residents' disposable income and prolonging the state's high unemployment rate.

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Amber Gunn of the free-market Evergreen Freedom Foundation in Olympia, Wash., gave the bottom line on I-1098's unreality-based advocates: "Initiative proponents like to operate in a Keynesian world where higher tax rates and their effects on human behavior and competitiveness among states don't matter. But those effects are present in the real world and must be accounted for."

I-1098's promoters tried to disguise their wealth-suppression vehicle as tax "relief" by tossing in a few stray targeted cuts. But they were called out by a judge and slapped with a court order to make the income tax burden explicit in the ballot title.

If only the taxmen in Washington, D.C., were required to do the same. Obama's budget proposal is a soak-the-rich scheme adorned with a few business tax breaks that would — for starters — impose nearly $1 trillion in higher taxes on couples making more than $250,000 and individuals making more than $200,000. Some "relief."

On Thursday afternoon, still smarting from the nationwide "shellacking" the Democrats received on Election Day, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs signaled that Obama would be willing to "entertain" temporary — not permanent — tax relief for the nation's highest earners. But a time-limited reprieve in prolonged economic hard times is expedient politics and bad policy. Tax relief should be all or none. The new House majority should force the Democrats to choose.

Republicans must stop allowing the White House to demonize America's entrepreneurs and producers. By continuing to refer to them as beneficiaries of the "Bush tax cuts" instead of as the besieged victims of Obama tax increases, the GOP cedes the moral high ground. It's time to make the White House own its noxious war on wealth.

Michelle Malkin is the author of "Culture of Corruption: Obama and his Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks & Cronies" (Regnery 2010). Her e-mail address is malkinblog@gmail.com.

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Comments

Trickle down time?

Submitted by Newsbubba on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 12:42pm.

I'm hardly rich.  I have X amount of money to live on each month, and I spend most of it paying for services from other people so I will have more time to screw off!

So here's how it works.  I have to pay more in taxes, I pay out less to service providers for them to do things for me.  I can drop the pool service in a heartbeat because it ain't that hard to take care of, but my attitude has always been that they need to make a living just as I did, so pay them to do it.  When I have less money because of more taxes, they get screwed.

Same with the yard service.  It can go to every other week instead of weekly, or even go away completely.  The boys at the marina are going to sell less gas, less bait, and less beer, which means they also get less tips.  Car and boat washing?  Forget it.  They can stay dirty and those guys will be out of work.

Are you dumb assed liberals catching on yet?

I must say, however, that the sweeties who make my drinks at Happy Hour will continue to do just fine, as long as they keep smiling and keep pouring.  Old men appreciate that!

Maybe Chris Matthews should get a "trickle down" his leg instead of a "thrill."

Comrade Bubba
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First Income Taxes

Submitted by dbz77 on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 1:08pm.

   When income taxes were first adopted in this country, what were the top rates?

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So the options are to extend

Submitted by Guttermouth's Return on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 1:26pm.

So the options are to extend the Bush tax cuts or let them expire.  Where's the redistribution of wealth in allowing the tax cuts to expire?  

I'll answer that.  Bush already redistributed wealth.  Democrats are re-redistributing wealth, as they are only returning the tax code to where it was prior to Bush's redistribution.

Of course, allowing the Bush tax cuts to continue means...wait for it...

More debt!  Anyone know how we'll pay for the extension?

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Ummm...

Submitted by Model850 on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 1:51pm.

Cut spending maybe, like every private citizen in the country has to do when outgo threatens to eclipse income.

And no, I don't think cutting spending is the whole answer, but it's a d****d good start, doncha think?

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Cutting spending is key.  But

Submitted by Guttermouth's Return on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 1:56pm.

Cutting spending is key.  But who's going to cut spending?  Bush couldn't do it, and Obama doesn't plan to do it.

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And therein

Submitted by Model850 on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 6:46pm.

And therein lies the problem. But just because no one seems willing to do it doesn't automatically mean government should just "steal" more money from its citizens. And although I didn't say so in my first reply I disagree totally with the idea that extending existing tax rates (cuts if you prefer) has to be "paid for."

It's simply maintaining revenue at current levels. Government doesn't lose anything in the transaction except the opportunity to grab more money to waste. You "pay" for it by reducing spending, as I said before. If Repubs and Dems both are unwilling to do that, taxpayers shouldn't be punished for their (the pols) intransigence by having more money stolen from them.

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The reality is that many

Submitted by Guttermouth's Return on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 6:51pm.

The reality is that many politicians who seek office make promises they can't keep.  Such is the situation now; pols preach cuts in spending until their constituents realize they're part of the cuts.

Palladino said he would cut Medicare if we was elected.  Now I can't imagine a whole lot of seniors would vote for someone like him, but those who did surely share the same sentiment as I - what they say and what they do are always 2 different things.

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Here's who's willing to cut spending...

Submitted by WhoIsJohnGalt on Tue, 11/09/2010 - 3:43pm.

Look thoroughly at this web site.  It shows who voted for what spending cut.  The program is three months old, and almost to a man, no Democrat found ANY spending cuts worthwhile.  While the opposite is true of Republicans in the House...almost to a man, every cut was voted for. Check it out and see what you think of the proposed cuts...

http://republicanwhip.house.gov/YouCut/

Week One: Cut the New Non-Reformed Welfare Program ($25 Billion Savings)

Week Two: Eliminate Federal Employee Pay Raise ($30 Billion Savings)

Week Three: Reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac ($30 Billion Savings)

Week Four: Sell Excess Federal Property ($15 Billion Savings)

Week Five: Prohibit Hiring New IRS Agents to Enforce Health Care Law ($15 Billion Savings)

Week Six: Taxpayer Subsidized Union Activities ($1.2 Billion Savings)

Week Seven: Prohibit Stimulus Funding for Promotional Signage (Tens of Millions)

Week Eight: Prohibit Sleeper Car Subsidies on Amtrak ($1.2 billion Savings)

Week Nine: Bipartisan Proposal to Terminate AEITC ($1.1 billion Savings)

Week Ten: Require Collection of Unpaid Taxes From Federal Employees ($1 billion Savings)

Week Eleven: Reduce Government Employment to 2008 Levels ($35 billion Savings)

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That's $155 Bn

Submitted by Blonde on Tue, 11/09/2010 - 3:53pm.

In eleven weeks.

Nice.

Thanks for a great post.

Handy Reference Guide to Obama's Gaffes and Goofs ~ Currently Numbering 200 (and Counting)

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I love Week 4:  sell excess

Submitted by motherbelt on Sat, 11/13/2010 - 2:08pm.

I love Week 4:  sell excess federal property

Aren't liberals the ones who are always clamoring for the Pope to sell off the Church's possessions to feed the poor of the world?

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nwahs Lies again. LIES RIGHT IN YOUR FACE.

Submitted by The Vet on Sat, 11/13/2010 - 2:04pm.

Dead Zippers:  But who's going to cut spending?  Bush couldn't do it...

Congress has the "Power of the Purse." The Constitution grants Congress the power of the purse. Under Article 1 [section 8], the Congress is given the power to tax and impose tariffs, duties, and other measures to collect revenue for the U.S. Treasury. It is also given the authority to borrow money on credit on behalf of the United States. Article 1 [section 9, clause 7] of the U.S. Constitution, states no money can be appropriated [spent] out of the U.S. Treasury except by Act of Congress. This means that governmental agencies and departments may not spend any money for their operations and programs that Congress has not appropriated nor use any federal money for any purpose that Congress has not expressly authorized.

 

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Here's an idea.  Instead of

Submitted by Guttermouth's Return on Sat, 11/13/2010 - 3:34pm.

Here's an idea.  Instead of chasing ghosts in your head, why don't you do something with your Saturday.  If I'm all that's on your agenda, you need to reassess.  

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DiaperBoy whines on - Troll Bible - New Testament.

Submitted by The Vet on Sat, 11/13/2010 - 3:57pm.

16. Make post after post noting the time others make comments as though everyione needs to live, work and breathe on your schedule. Make creepy stalkerish posts what time to post and what time to go to bed. Dead Zippers: Get some sleep, man.  The date stamps of your posts can only mean... ... Now get some sleep. ... Isn't it bedtime yet? ... Were you really up at 3 am just to post... ... why don't you do something with your Saturday

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Cut programs

Submitted by Red Jeep on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 1:55pm.

Abolish the Departments of Energy and Education for starters and the Rural Housing Service and  the Rural Utilities Service. If those cuts don't make up the difference let me know and I'll find a few more to be rid of.

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Yeah.

Submitted by Newsbubba on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 2:06pm.

Quit spending so $%#@^&# much!

Get your head out of your ass for a minute.

Comrade Bubba
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Classy

Submitted by Guttermouth's Return on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 2:11pm.

Classy

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Thanks!

Submitted by Newsbubba on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 3:01pm.

I've never heard that one before.

Comrade Bubba
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The underlying premise

Submitted by KC Mulville on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 1:34pm.

Ultimately, the underlying premise is that government has more right to your money than you do, and if they want it, they have the right to take it. 

I reject the premise. 

 

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Another Place to Cut

Submitted by dbz77 on Tue, 11/09/2010 - 10:23pm.

Bring out troops home from Europe and Japan.

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