CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THE FALSE
ASSUMPTION THAT PASSING TAXES WILL BE EASY”
Spend more than $30 million to pass a
temporary tax increase proposition. See a governor put his entire political
capital on the line to pass it, including airing countless television
commercials featuring that man almost begging voters for a yes verdict.
Threaten draconian cuts to schools and colleges that have already seen programs
pared to the bone.
Result: The measure – last fall’s
Proposition 30 – passes by a 55-45 percent margin, with every exit poll showing
that, as Field Poll director Mark DiCamillo reported, “White non-Hispanics
divided their votes evenly…but ethnic voters (Latinos, Asian-Americans and
African Americans) collectively supported it by a 20-point margin, giving it
its entire margin of victory.”
Another result: A sudden presumption
that passing tax increases in California has become easy.
One product of this new assumption is
a $2.2 billion per year tax increase proposition now being circulated primarily
by liberal Democrats. This one – likely to be voted on in November 2014 – would
add 2.5 cents per gallon to the already sky-high price of gasoline, tax
alcoholic beverages varying amounts between a nickel and $1.65 per gallon and
add a new levy on tobacco sales of 1.25 cents per individual cigarette.
The money would all be earmarked for
higher education, with 80 percent going to the University of California and the
Cal State system and the rest to community colleges.
One thing for sure about this
proposal: If it gets the 807,615 valid voter signatures it needs to reach the
ballot, you won’t see Gov. Jerry Brown staring into a television camera and
imploring all Californians to vote yes.
For Brown himself would almost
certainly share the ballot with this proposition, and he’s not likely to stake
the outcome of what's likely to be his final political campaign on the outcome
of a tax proposition.
Yes, two tax measures did pass last
fall: both Proposition 30 and the unrelated Proposition 39, which is now
raising $1 billion yearly by closing some tax loopholes gifted to international
corporations by ex-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger as part of a 2009 budget deal.
While the effort to pass 30 was
difficult and in doubt until Election Night, many voters saw 39 as a no-brainer
because it essentially taxes companies on their California profits, ending the
previous shell game that allowed them to doctor their books by moving profits
made here to other countries where taxes might be lower. Even at that, about 40
percent of voters still said no.
The fact those two measures passed at
a time when state government had pled poverty for years and voters had seen
roads deteriorate while many other services were cut does not mean passing more
taxes will be easy.
Especially when the taxes proposed, as
in the plan now circulating, would be permanent, unlike the levies of
Proposition 30, which expire after four years unless voters okay an extension.
The presumption behind 30 is that the economy will improve, eliminating the
need for most of its taxes.
Schwarzenegger learned as recently as
May 2009 how difficult it can be to pass even a temporary new tax, when his
sales tax increase Proposition 1A lost by a 65-35 percent margin in a special
election.
The makeup of the electorate has
surely changed a bit since then, with more Latinos and Asian-Americans now on
the rolls. But any such change does not come close to accounting for the huge
difference between that outcome and the Proposition 30 win.
A sense of near panic over what might
happen to schools, colleges, roads, water quality and many other state
functions is about the only thing that can account for what amounts to a 20
percent swing in the vote between the two elections.
There is no longer any such sense, nor
a great likelihood that any substantial political figure will even attempt to
encourage one.
So the notion that passing yet another
tax measure will be easy holds no water. Which suggests the newest tax increase
effort is doomed long before it even qualifies for a vote.
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. Elias is author of the current book "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It," now available in an updated fourth printing. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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