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Tax Shifting With Bohac's Assessment

Cap as Our Example (+)


by: lightseeker
Thu Apr 17, 2008 at 00:20:44 AM CDT

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In my last posting I put the lie to


the claim that the rich pay more
than their share of taxes. Let me
now put the lie to the claim that
Republicans are tax cutters. They
are tax shifters.

If you were to name the least


favorite tax to Republicans like it
would be hands down, the
progressive income tax. Recall
what it was called in the last
posting - "legal plunder." So, how
do they want to pay for the public
goods and services we all need?
Well, they want to shift the system By lightseeker2
from the more progressive taxes ,
which emphasize ability to pay as
a factor in setting rates, to ones
which ignore ability to pay and
emphasize "flat , one size fits all
equality". Consumption/sales taxes
are one example. Such taxes have
the impact of shifting tax burdens
from those who are benefiting to
most AND can afford to pay their
share to those who are less able to
do so. In other words, the game is
shift the tax burden
lightseeker :: Tax Shifting With Bohac's Assessment Cap as Our Example For the
Republican heavy thinkers, tax shifting is a moral issue. Those who have largely deserve
what they have. Let Lakoff explain:
George Lakoff tells how conservatives use language to dominate politics...

...to the right wing, the good citizens are the disciplined ones - those who have already
become wealthy or at least self-reliant - and those who are on the way.... Wealth is a
measure of discipline. Taxes beyond the minimum needed for such government take
away from the good, disciplined people rewards that they have earned and spend it
on those who have not earned it.

Got that? " Igot mine, too bad about you... Of course this seems to mean that Paris Hilton
and George Bush are more worthy than the most of us because they have money

This rather stark philosophy plays itself out in Texas in the heavy use of sales
(consumption) taxes.

Here is the mix of revenues we use:

By lightseeker2

Now, guess who pays these taxes?


For the last decade or or so the standard re-election line form our Republican
reestablishment is , I will cut your taxes. What they meant , of course , was your property
taxes. For example, The Holy Grail, for Dwayne Bohac, a typical Rove clone
Republican, last session was a Property Assessment Cap.

Dwayne Bohac, the Houston Republican who is carrying a bill that would allow voters to
decide in a constitutional election whether to cap appraisal increases on all property at 5
percent per year. The current cap, which applies only to residences, is 10 percent...

The bill has opened new fissures among Republican lawmakers. Rep. Fred Hill, a
Richardson Republican generally considered a conservative's conservative, calls it
"the worst public policy that I have ever seen the Legislature deal with in the 16
years I've been here"...
Texas cities and counties, and even the Texas Association of Business, have come out
hard against the proposal.

Why would a fellow Republican rail against Bohac's proposal? Well, he knows what is
going on. See, here's the problem:

By lightseeker2

Can you say, tax shifting? Of course you can! So the Governor Goodhair and the Boyz
can , with a straight face claim to be cutting your taxes, when all they are doing is shifting
them downward to the local level!

Need more proof?

The Texas Revenue Premier 2005

...Looking at it another way: Texas has a very low state tax bill, ranking 49th [ now 50th]
in state taxes per resident in 2003. But Texas has a very high local tax bill because the
state "pushes down" to local governments a larger share of education costs. Texas
ranks 13th in local taxes per resident in 2002.
What has been happening over the last two legislative cycles is that this bogus method of
paying for vital public goods and services is running up against reality, and reality can't
be fudged much longer:

The Property Tax Cap Craze Collides with Reality in Texas - The Tax Justice Digest
"The Property Tax Cap Craze Collides with Reality in Texas
November 17, 2006 4:20 PM | Permalink
Texas State Republican Chairman Tom Pauken recently embarked on a tour of the state to
spread the good news: Governor Rick Perry is going to save voters from high property
taxes by lowering the state's property tax cap from ten percent to five percent a year.
Governor Perry and Chairman Pauken are putting quite a bit of effort into promoting the
proposed lower tax cap, but not everyone is convinced. The House Committee on Local
Government Ways & Means conducted a survey on the effects of lowering the cap,
only to find that "Appraisal caps unfairly shift the property tax burden from the
wealthiest of property owners to the less wealthy."

Worse still, lowering the cap would leave less money available for both local and
state governments. The effect would be particularly severe in small towns that do
not generate much sales tax revenue, and must rely on property taxes to fund local
services. The Metropolitan Organization has come up with a better solution: a property
tax "circuit breaker". Circuit breakers, which help protect the most vulnerable from high
property tax bills without gutting state coffers, are already in place in thirty-five states.
Texans should urge Governor Perry to adopt this solution."

The problem for Democrats, for all Progressives is getting the message out, helping
people understand what we all know. These Republicans can't cut taxes right, they flat
can't govern. The mess that George has made at the national level is echoed by his
proteges at the state level. Our schools are in trouble, our healthcare system for the
needy is in shambles, we are literally trying to create a two tiered transportation system ,
the prisons and jails are in crisis. Need I go on?

I won't even go into the matter of jacked up user and access fees as well as court costs
that soak the poor. These too are ways of tax shifting from the well off to the "morally
suspect" who deserved to be punished!

This is an issue we can win, if we can explain it!Take a look:

Poll Examines Public Attitudes about Local Government Taxes, Services

* " Would you favor or oppose reducing the annual homeowner property tax appraisal
cap from 10% to 5% if you knew it would likely result in funding cuts for public
education and other local government services?"

39%- Favor
49%- Oppose
12%- Undecided
* " Would you favor or oppose reducing the annual homeowner property tax appraisal
cap from 10% to 5% if you knew it would mostly benefit owners of expensive homes
while increasing taxes on others such as renters, small business owners and farmers and
ranchers?"

21%- Favor
69%- Oppose
10%- Undecided

* " Would you favor or oppose reducing the annual homeowner property tax appraisal
cap from 10% to 5%if you knew it would result in homes with the same market value
being taxed at different rates?"

22%- Favor
63%- Oppose
15%- Undecided

So, now you know why Texas Republican tax cuts are really tax shifts that aid some at
the expense of most of us.

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