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			<title>Reason Magazine - Contributors</title>
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<title>The Great Tax Revolt of 1994</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/29530.html</link>
<description> 

&lt;p&gt;Two years ago, when businessman-turned political-activist Douglas Bruce
launched Amendment I in
Colorado, a ballot initiative requiring that all new and increased state
and local taxes and debt be approved
by popular vote, his political opponents waged a holy war against him.
Bruce was characterized as a
&quot;terrorist&quot; who would &quot;lob a hand grenade into a schoolyard full of
children.&quot; Defeating the proposal was
said to be the moral equivalent of &quot;fighting the Nazis at the Battle of the
Bulge.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;And these, mind you, were just the comments of the governor, Democrat Roy
Romer.

&lt;p&gt;The public-employee unions, education lobby, and bond traders were far less
civil. One bond trader,
fearful that the voter-approval requirement for new debt would put him out
of business, even suggested that
if Amendment I were adopted, the pope might be assassinated when he came to
Denver, for lack of police.
Despite the hyperbole, hysteria, and nearly $1 million spent to defeat the
initiative (versus less than
$300,000 spent by taxpayer groups in support), Amendment I was approved by
54 percent of the voters in
November 1992.

&lt;p&gt;It has had an immediate policy impact. Tax increases have been stopped dead
in their tracks. In
November 1993, one year after Amendment I's passage, Colorado voters were
asked to reinstate a relatively
trivial 0.2 percent tourism tax that had expired. They rejected the
$11-million tax hike by a margin of 55 to
45. Last year Colorado property taxes rose by less than 1 percent--the
smallest increase in 20 years.
Without new revenue sources to tap easily, state government in Denver is
changing the way it does
business. &quot;These days, when agencies want more funds, they are forced to
cannibalize each other,&quot; says
Bruce.

&lt;p&gt;But the real impact of Amendment I, and the great untold political story of
the year, is how rapidly this
initiative is invading other states. Oklahoma and Washington voters have
already joined Colorado in
passing it. Similar initiatives have qualified for the November ballots in
Nevada and Oregon and will likely
also appear on the ballot in Florida, Missouri, Montana, and North Dakota.
Grover Norquist, president of
Americans for Tax Reform, which advises state taxpayer groups across the
country, predicts that &quot;the way
things are going, by 1996 every state with initiative and referendum will
have passed a version of the
Colorado law.&quot; So far, the measure seems to command the same kind of
broad-based populist appeal as term
limits.

&lt;p&gt;Welcome to the great tax revolt of 1994. Not since Howard Jarvis
successfully spearheaded California's
Proposition 13 property tax-cut initiative in 1978--and unleashed a
taxpayer protest that eventually swept
through more than half the states and catapulted Ronald Reagan to the White
House--have there been more
citizen-driven efforts to roll back taxes. Consider the wide array of
anti-tax actions on tap across the
country:

&lt;p&gt;* This year taxpayers in 11 states, with a total population of nearly 50
million people, may be voting on
some form of anti-tax or spending-restraint ballot initiative.

&lt;p&gt;* In addition to voter-approval requirements for taxes, a parallel anti-tax
measure gaining momentum is
the idea of requiring a two-thirds vote in the legislature to raise taxes.
In November 1992, 72 percent of
Arizona voters approved this supermajority requirement. Similar initiatives
may appear on the ballot in
Montana and Nevada this year. (Significantly, Congress has this requirement
reversed for Washington,
D.C.: A three-fifths supermajority vote is required to cut taxes, but only
a majority is necessary to raise
them.)

&lt;p&gt;* In June, for the first time ever, California voters rejected every bond
initiative on the ballot, $6 billion
worth. Those included proposals to pay for everything from schools to parks
to earthquake relief to crime
prevention. Reported &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.wsj.com&quot;&gt;The Wall Street Journal&lt;/a&gt;: &quot;State legislators are
reeling in disbelief.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;* Meanwhile, almost half the states have enacted tax cuts this year. New Jersey's newly elected Gov.
Christine Whitman delivered on half her promised 30 percent income tax-rate
reduction; Michigan's John
Engler chopped the property tax in half; and Mississippi's Kirk Fordice
eliminated the state capital gains
tax. Arizona's Fife Symington has cut the state income tax three years in a
row and has now pledged to
completely abolish the state income tax if reelected. Art Laffer's
supply-side movement--a subject of
widespread ridicule among the Washington intelligentsia--has never had more
dedicated practitioners.

&lt;p&gt;* Even prominent Democrat lawmakers have caught the tax-cutting fever. In
Georgia, Gov. Zell Miller
won approval of a $100-million family-income tax cut that over two years
will increase exemptions for
elderly residents by $2,000 and dependent children by $1,000. Meanwhile in
California, Willie Brown,
speaker of the assembly for more years than anyone cares to remember and
perhaps the sponsor of more
expensive tax hikes than any politician in American history, has suddenly
discovered supply-side religion.
Brown proposes a 6-percent investment tax credit as the surest way &quot;to keep
and expand jobs in California.&quot;
He predicts that the tax credit will &quot;generate additional income, property,
and sales tax revenue for the state&quot;-
-and no, that's not Jack Kemp talking.

&lt;p&gt;* All told, 1994 will be the first year in more than a decade that state
tax burdens will actually fall.

&lt;p&gt;There are several explanations for this sudden and intense taxpayer
discontent. One is simply pent-up
frustration with gigantic expansions of state budgets in recent years. &quot;In
the 1980s, tax dollars rolled into
state treasuries in wheelbarrows, and were quickly spent,&quot; Connecticut Gov.
Lowell Weicker, hardly a fiscal
tightwad himself, has observed.

&lt;p&gt;He's right. In the Reagan era of &quot;greed and over-consumption,&quot; few Wall
Street fat cats could match the
spending binge of many state governments. Though some state spending
increases were the result of federal
mandates in areas such as welfare and Medicaid, frugality did not otherwise
reign among the states. In
Florida, the budget was $7 billion in 1980; today it's $30 billion. In 1980
Arizona had a $3-billion budget;
today, it's $10 billion. Connecticut's expenditures have roughly quadrupled
since 1980. Even adjusting for
inflation, most states have budgets roughly twice as large as they did 15
years ago with virtually no
corresponding improvement in services--indeed, public-opinion polls suggest
a deterioration in schools,
crime prevention, and the like. This is natural grist for a
storm-the-Bastille taxpayer revolt.

&lt;p&gt;Also driving the tax rebellion is an increasing recognition that the
soak-the-rich tax strategy employed
by many states during the past recession is shrinking state economies. A
1993 Joint Economic Committee
study reports that since 1990 alone, the top 10 tax-hiking states have
created zero net new jobs; the top 10
tax-cutting states gained 650,000.

&lt;p&gt;Nearly two-thirds of the jobs lost during the 1991-92 recession disappeared
from just two states:
California and New York. There are many factors behind these states'
decline, but certainly it's no
coincidence that both have among the highest tax burdens in the country.
Boise, Idaho; Reno, Nevada; and
Salt Lake City, Utah are three of the fastest growing cities in America.
With the lure of very low taxes and
a business-friendly regulatory climate, they are successfully cherry
picking off of California's industrial
base. California Gov. Pete Wilson's tax policies have done more for the
prosperity of those cities than
1,000 economic development offices.

&lt;p&gt;Then there is the economic revival in Michigan. Inheriting a $1.8 billion
budget deficit four years
ago, Engler spurned the Florio-Weicker-Wilson putting-taxes-first fiscal
solution and took a chainsaw to the
budget, carving out savings in every state program from welfare to arts
subsidies. He also cut taxes--11
times in fact, including his recent controversial $1.1-billion property-tax cut. (See &quot;Engler's Angle,&quot;
August/September.) Those policies now appear to be paying off. Once derided
as the epicenter of the rust
belt, today Michigan has a lower unemployment rate (5.5 percent) than the
national average for the first
time since Ford introduced the Mustang convertible--in 1966. And the state
is now debating what to do
about this year's $300-million budget &lt;em&gt;surplus&lt;/em&gt;.

&lt;p&gt;Perhaps the single largest impetus for the sudden wave of tax-cutting
frenzy for politicians is pure
political survival. Since 1990, voters have ousted eight tax-raising
governors at the polls. The election that
sent political shock waves throughout state capitals nationwide was, of
course, Christine Whitman's
triumph over Jim Florio in New Jersey last November. Florio came to power
in 1990 as the self-
proclaimed anti-Reagan, pledging to replace supply-side doctrine with a
new-age progressive populism. His
agenda of combining soak-the-rich tax hikes with Robin Hood
wealth-redistributing education and social
welfare spending programs was greeted with worshipful applause in
Washington and in the media. A month
after his record $2.8-billion tax package passed, New York Gov. Mario Cuomo
praised Florio as a &quot;bold and
instant national hero.&quot; He even received the annual JFK Profile in Courage
award.

&lt;p&gt;Christine Whitman's victory shattered the Florio delusion. Exit polls from
that election revealed just
how thoroughly voters had trounced Florio's progressive liberal vision: 60
percent of the electorate said they
preferred &quot;fewer government services with lower taxes,&quot; while only 33
percent said they wanted &quot;more of
both.&quot; But what is really discombobulating to the left is that as Whitman
has made good on her ambitious
tax-cutting agenda, her approval rating has soared to over 70 percent--even
as her &quot;right-wing, supply-side
agenda&quot; is reviled with almost daily regularity in The&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.nytimes.com&quot;&gt;New York Times&lt;/a&gt; and
New Jersey newspapers. So
popular is her tax-cutting program that now Whitmanomics is being
copy-catted in GOP gubernatorial
campaigns in Connecticut, New York, and a handful of other states. Whitman,
a housewife by trade, is even
seriously discussed as a vice-presidential candidate.

&lt;p&gt;The accomplishments of Whitman, Engler, and other tax-cutting governors are
impressive. But the real
revolutionaries transforming state politics in America today are ordinary,
unelected citizens like Douglas
Bruce. They are relying on grass-roots direct democracy to permanently
change the way states do business.
While a popular politician's legacy can be quickly dismantled once he's
gone, the latest wave of populist
anti-tax ballot initiatives could foil the tax-raising efforts of teachers,
unions, Naderites, and other pro-
spending lobbies for many years to come.

&lt;p&gt;Consider Montana, which is well on its way to ensuring that the taxman is
held at bay for the
foreseeable future. This November, there are &lt;em&gt;three&lt;/em&gt; tax-related initiatives
on the ballot. It all started when a
first-ever state sales tax plan was put up for public vote in a special
election in June 1993. The legislature
sneakily passed a $73-million income tax hike that would go into effect if
the sales tax were defeated--a
virtual certainty according to the polls.

&lt;p&gt;Not only was the sales tax defeated 75-25, but 20 percent of Montana's
voters signed petitions to
suspend the $73-million &quot;blackmail tax&quot; and put it, too, to a public vote
this November. Public sentiment
is running high in favor of repeal, though Rob Natelson, the law professor
leading the petition drive, has
been labeled a &quot;tax dodger&quot; by the Montana Education Association, and one
Republican legislator has
threatened to introduce legislation to eliminate the law school where
Natelson teaches.

&lt;p&gt;Two other tax-limitation measures are on Montana's ballot. CI-66 would
require voter approval for any
new or increased state tax; CI-67 would require a two-thirds supermajority
of the relevant lawmakers to pass
any new or increased state or local taxes and fees or to exceed the
previous budget's level of spending. While
there is some disagreement among anti-tax activists as to whether it is
wiser to rely on voters' discipline (as
CI-66 would) or politicians' discipline (as CI-67 would), both measures
enjoy wide public support. Thus,
both are likely to pass, giving double protection against the expansion of
state government in Montana.

&lt;p&gt;Passing such ballot initiatives tilts the political playing field in the
taxpayers' direction. Before enacting
the &quot;It's Time&quot; supermajority initiative in 1992, the Arizona legislature
had raised taxes eight times in nine
years. &quot;But these days,&quot; boasts taxpayer advocate Sydney Hoff Hay, one of
the principal sponsors of It's
Time, &quot;the legislators don't even bother to &lt;em&gt;propose&lt;/em&gt; new taxes.&quot; Arizona
Gov. Symington agrees. &quot;The little
secret [of the supermajority requirement] is that my income tax cuts are
pretty much irreversible,&quot; he says.
Government in Arizona will be ratcheted downward, not upward.

&lt;p&gt;The supermajority requirement makes it difficult for state lawmakers to tax
even the most demonized
industries: tobacco companies, big oil, utilities, and the like. Says ATR's
Grover Norquist: &quot;Any industry
that's large enough to be worth looting probably has the political clout to
muster the necessary one-third-
plus-one votes of the legislature to inoculate themselves from tax hikes.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;Supermajority vote requirements aren't a fail-safe protection against
higher taxes, of course. Pete Wilson
was able, after all, to wrangle the two-thirds votes he needed out of the
California legislature to secure his
$7-billion 1990 tax hike.

&lt;p&gt;Still, the political establishment views anti-tax ballot initiatives with a
combination of fear and loathing.
Public-employee unions, school boards, lobbyists, and even local chambers
of commerce are mobilizing to
defeat these measures. Their defense strategy is one of containment: Spare
no expense to defeat the tax
initiatives wherever and whenever they appear on the ballot.

&lt;p&gt;In Florida, the Tax Cap Committee is sponsoring four amendments, probably
the most ambitious anti-
tax effort in any state this year. The two most controversial would require
taxpayer approval for new and
increased taxes passed by the legislature and would require a two-thirds
popular vote for any constitutional
amendments that impose a new tax. Opponents are attacking the messenger
rather than the message. Nearly
90 percent of the Tax Cap Committee's finances are alleged to have come
from U.S. Sugar Corporation, a
firm that was the target of a proposed amendment--since struck down by the
state Supreme Court--seeking
to impose a tax on sugar to fund pollution abatement in the Everglades.
Thus, &lt;em&gt;The Miami Herald&lt;/em&gt; suggested
that the hidden motivation behind the two-thirds vote requirement to impose
new taxes by constitutional
amendment is to &quot;derail efforts to clean-up the Everglades.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;Tax Cap chairman Dave Biddulph objects that this charge is &quot;blatantly
false,&quot; noting an Everglades
cleanup bill has already been passed by the legislature and signed by the
governor this year. He further
explains that government regulations make it very difficult and expensive
for citizens to get initiatives on
the ballot. &quot;We knew from all the experience that if you don't end up with
some money some place along
the line, it never is going to happen,&quot; Biddulph says. (The proposed
amendment to tax big sugar also
received most of its money from an out-of-state multimillionaire
commodities trader.)

&lt;p&gt;Despite the large amount of funding from U.S. Sugar, this is, in many ways,
a genuine grass-roots
political movement. Tax Cap chairman Dave Biddulph emphasizes that his
organization existed before U.S.
Sugar Corporation realized that it could be a strategic ally. Tax Cap has
9,000 individual financial
contributors, and nearly a million Floridians have signed the Tax Cap
ballot petition. One such taxpayer
asked petitioners, &quot;Is there anything I can sign to keep from paying taxes
at all?&quot; He later said, &quot;I'm just fed
up with taxes eating up more than half of everything I make. I can either
get in a boat and sail away or I
can do something to protest.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;Florida's legislature itself is attempting to scuttle the Tax Cap
initiatives. They placed their own
spending cap--a much weaker one, excluding several key areas of state
spending--on the November ballot.
The legislators even tried to install a &quot;poison pill&quot; provision into their
initiative that would allow it to
supersede any other tax limit approved by the voters. But thanks in part to
a Tax Cap Committee-organized
phone blitz on Tallahassee, that provision was dropped.

&lt;p&gt;A more imminent threat to the Tax Cap Amendments is State Attorney General
Bob Butterworth, who
is challenging the legality of the measures before the Florida Supreme
Court. He argues that the wording of
the ballots is confusing and that they effectively deal with more than one
subject. (One of the four
amendments sponsored by Tax Cap is specifically designed to allow a
citizen-sponsored ballot amendment
to deal with more than one subject when the state's taxing power is
concerned.) The court appears to be a
huge hurdle: Judges have struck down three of the last four Florida ballot
initiatives on technical grounds.

&lt;p&gt;Another common tactic employed by opponents of anti-tax measures is to
frighten the public about the
alleged dire fiscal consequences of passing them. The Missouri Education
Association has organized and
funded a front group called &quot;Citizens to Protect Missouri's Future&quot; to
defeat the state's tax and spending
limitation initiative known as the Hancock II Amendment. The group
complains that if the amendment
passes, University of Missouri tuitions will double, thousands of
government employees will be laid off,
prisons will shut down, hardened criminals will be turned loose on the
streets to prey on the public, and--
horror of horrors--$4.5 billion of free federal highway aid will have to be
sent back to Washington.

&lt;p&gt;To bolster their point about the devastating impact that tax-limitation
measures can have on state
governments, opponents often point to California's Proposition 13. Prop.
13--the granddaddy of citizen tax-
limitation initiatives--rolled back local property taxes to 1 percent of
assessed value, limited assessment
increases to the lower of 2 percent or the annual inflation rate, and
required two-thirds voter approval for
new local taxes and a two-thirds legislative majority for new or increased
state taxes. A &lt;em&gt;Sacramento Bee&lt;/em&gt;
editorial captured the essence of the attacks on Prop. 13: &quot;There is almost
nothing in the state that hasn't
been affected by Prop. 13 for the worse,&quot; the newspaper stated.

&lt;p&gt;Similar stories have appeared nationally in &lt;em&gt;The&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.nytimes.com&quot;&gt;New York Times&lt;/a&gt; Magazine&lt;/em&gt; and
&lt;em&gt;Money&lt;/em&gt; magazine. The
&lt;em&gt;Money&lt;/em&gt; article, titled &quot;The Tax Revolt that Wrecked California,&quot; was crammed
with sorrowful tales of a tax
revolt run amok. Wrote Richard Reeves: &quot;Fifteen years later, the lessons of
Prop. 13 read like cliches:
There's no free lunch; you get what you pay for. Inevitably, as revenues
fell, spending and critical public
services were cut. In California, those cuts have led to crises in
education, medical care, and public safety.
They have triggered a civil war pitting the old against the young, longtime
residents against new, whites
against blacks and browns, haves against have-nots.&quot; For some reason Reeves
was unable to find a
connection between Proposition 13 and the recent earthquakes.

&lt;p&gt;California taxpayers no doubt only wish that Prop. 13 had been half as
effective in rolling back
government as Reeves suggests. Joel Fox, president of the Howard Jarvis
Taxpayer Foundation, notes that
property tax revenue has been climbing by about 10 percent a year for a
decade and the California budget has
tripled from $15 billion to $54 billion a year since 1978, when Prop. 13
rocked the nation. State and local
governments in California have many problems these days, but being starved
for revenue is surely not one
of them. (See &quot;Pushing the Limit,&quot; November 1993.) And perhaps the citizens
are the best judges of
whether their state has been ruined by Prop. 13: Opinion polls still show
that if it were voted on today,
Prop. 13 would pass with the same two-thirds majority it did 15 years ago.

&lt;p&gt;Oddly enough, considering the avalanche of criticism in the media about the
allegedly draconian effects of
Prop. 13, some skeptics oppose these tax limits for the opposite reason:
that they have little fiscal impact
one way or the other. These critics point to the multitude of methods
politicians have invented to evade tax
and spending limits. For example, most of these measures cap only the
&quot;general fund&quot; budget, typically
about 40 percent of the state budget. That provides a major loophole for
politicians wanting to increase
spending and revenue.

&lt;p&gt;Perhaps the most blatant end run around a tax and spending limit occurred
recently in Connecticut. In
1992 nearly 80 percent of Connecticut voters approved an initiative
limiting spending growth to the growth
rate of personal income. But the state attorney general has ruled the
measure inoperative until the legislature
defines what &quot;growth of personal income&quot; and other such terms mean--which
it conveniently refuses to do.
While the Hartford politicians dragged their heels, Connecticut's budget
expanded by 7.2 percent last year
instead of the 3 percent the limitation would have allowed. Faced with a
legislature that stubbornly refuses
to enact a constitutional amendment approved by a huge majority of the
voters, a freshman Republican state
legislator and a group of taxpayers have sued the legislature for defying
the state constitution. The state filed
motions to dismiss the suit on the grounds that it infringed on the state's
sovereign immunity and that the
issue was a political matter outside the purview of the court. The court
has already ruled against the state on
the first motion; at press time, a decision on the second one was expected
shortly.

&lt;p&gt;Given opposing complaints that they have done too much and too little, what
is one to conclude about the
performance of tax and spending limits? Somewhere between the claim that
their impact has been
apocalyptic and the claim that their impact has been trivial lies the
truth. Our just-released Cato Institute
study compares the growth of per-capita spending and taxes in the 18 states
that adopted binding tax and
expenditure limits in the last tax revolt versus those that did not. We
found that spending continued to grow
in the tax-limit states, but at a slower pace than in other states. We also
found that real per-capita taxes in
states with tax limitations grew by 11.9 percent over the five years before
enactment but &lt;em&gt;fell&lt;/em&gt; by 2.8 percent
over the first five years after enactment. As a result, the state tax
burden per family of four in tax-
expenditure limit states was $650 lower (five years after the limit was
enacted) than it would have been if
state tax growth had not been reversed. Admittedly, that's a far cry from
the revolutionary change in state
government that had been sought and promised by the promoters of measures
like Prop. 13, but it is
progress.

&lt;p&gt;Nonetheless, taxpayer frustration with the relative inability of Prop.
13-era limits to more effectively
deter the expansion of state government over the past 15 years has sparked
the current anti-tax ballot
strategies. And today's taxpayer groups have learned from the experiences
of their predecessors. They
recognize that the main cause of the ineffectiveness of Prop. 13-era limits
is that they left the ultimate
authority for slowing the growth of Leviathan with Leviathan itself. To
address that problem, the current
movement is toward measures that leave the ultimate authority with the
voters. These new measures have
the potential to become the most effective ironclad restraints on
government expansion ever.

&lt;p&gt;The latest polls suggest that most of these initiatives stand a good chance
of passing. The Oregon anti-
tax measure has 66 percent support; Missouri's Hancock II amendment has 82
percent support; and the
Nevada and Florida voter-approval requirements both command near 90 percent
support. But they are hardly
done deals. The history of initiatives is that approval levels often fall off sharply as election day approaches.

&lt;p&gt;Remarkably, while this citizen-driven anti-tax uprising sweeps through
state capitals from Tallahassee to
Carson City, Washington, D.C.'s attitude has been one of oblivious
unconcern. In fact, CNN political guru
William Schneider recently stated that &quot;I see no great tax revolt out
there.&quot; And he gets paid a lot of money
for such opinions.

&lt;p&gt;But stay tuned. This November, even Washington may be feeling the effects
of the tax revolt of 1994.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">29530@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Oct 1994 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Stephen Moore) info@reason.com (Dean Stansel) </author>
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