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TALKIN' THE DOUBLE-TALK
Pay no heed,
To what I say;
It'll change
By end of day.
The two top Republican state senators recently took pen in hand to beat up on
the Democratic tax-cut plan. Not a bad idea. It's a dork. But the
across-the-board plan that Adela Eads and James Fleming set forth in its place
make the Democrats look positively Solomonic.
The Dems, you'll recall, would give us an income tax credit if our local
property tax exceeds 5 percent of our income. Not what you'd call a
sparklingly lucid proposal, but it would surely favor central-city,
lower-income homeowners.
Not fair, say Eads and Fleming. It leaves out non-homeowners. Good point, and
one which has been corrected in later versions. Most renters are poorer and
could surely use some help. But not to worry, dear Republican reader. Those
senatorial tears were only crocodile. Eads and Fleming have not suddenly been
transformed into protectors of the poor. Their tax cut, like all previous
ones, would shower its benefits largely upon the rich. They term this result
"the fairest and most honest way of providing tax relief..." Right.
The senators also swell with pride in reflecting on the tax cut that they
passed themselves during their recent moment in power. It gives each of us a
$100 property-tax exemption on our income tax. This means that in order to
collect, we have to be prosperous enough both to pay the state income tax and
to own our own home or car. But wait! Isn't that the very same argument Eads
and Fleming just raised against the Democratic plan? You bet. Which merely
highlights the double-talk and double-race that characterizes so much
political discourse about taxes.
Or take another reason that the senators oppose the circuit-breaker. It's not
fair, they say, because it only helps 15 percent of Connecticut households.
God bless them, Eads and Fleming may have just come up with a whole new
definition of "fairness." It would delete considerations such as need, worth,
and equity, replacing them all with maximization of beneficiaries. Of course
maximizing beneficiaries, or voters, is nothing new in politics. It's just the
sudden elevation of that practical need to the level of moral imperative that
is new.
But the Republicans are at least on firm political ground with this
double-talk. Very few voters truly care about fairness. They just like to hear
"income-tax cut" and forget the rest. That's the whole Rowland philosophy, and
other Republican governors too. Cut whatever spending you have to, preferably
for non-voters (the poor), and finesse the rest with rosy revenue estimates.
Nationwide, it's been a winning combination. Democrats risk annihilation by
clinging to some tired old measures of real fairness. If only 15 percent of
voters benefit from their "circuit-breaker," those Democrats are accepting a
mighty big handicap.
The Republicans are also carving themselves a pleasant niche among the rich.
An across-the-board tax cut usually benefits the wealthy most. Moneyed
citizens are prone to remember little gifts like that, especially when it
comes time to write campaign checks. And these days, money is even more
important than votes.
But perhaps most shocking in the Eads-Fleming statement is their outright
rejection of any state duty to provide relief from local property taxes. Every
state, including Connecticut, so far recognizes its duty to help impoverished
central cities pay their bills. In fact, Connecticut just took over the whole
cost of local welfare from the cities. And the Connecticut Supreme Court,
years ago in Horton v. Meskill, forced the state to give big school bucks to
poor towns, and small school bucks to rich towns. Other states have created
counties and special districts to share the uneven costs of police, education
and highways.
What Senators Eads and Fleming have actually done with their manifesto is to
inch their party one more step along the path to a full
devil-take-the-hindmost philosophy. And as Connecticut becomes more and more
segregated between the voting middle-class and the non-voting poor, the
Democrats have little choice but to follow along.
(Bill Collins, a former Mayor of Norwalk, is a syndicated columnist.)
