Survey of 2010 Gubernatorial campaign websites: on Tax Reform
Dennis Daugaard:
No new taxes; no increases in existing taxes
A recession is not the time to raise taxes. I will not raise taxes as governor. I will not support any new taxes or any increases in existing taxes.
I would only consider a tax increase in response to an emergency, such as the temporary gas tax increase to pay for snow removal after the blizzards of 1997.
Source: 2010 Gubernatorial campaign website daugaardforgovernor.com
Nov 2, 2010
John Kasich:
Lower taxes to create competitive climate
While Ohio's problems are daunting, I believe they are fixable--but only by creating a business environment that rewards investment & increases wages. With forward-thinking, solutions-oriented leadership, we can transform Ohio into a model of job creatio
and economic vitality that other states will want to follow. To succeed we must lower taxes--Create a tax climate that allows Ohio to compete with other states to attract new businesses, foster job creation, and keep our precious, existing jobs here
Source: 2010 Gubernatorial campaign website, kasichforohio.com
Nov 2, 2010
Nikki Haley:
29 taxes out of 32 create little revenue but add bureaucracy
While the Department of Revenue administers 32 taxes, only three of those taxes generate over 90% of General Fund revenue: the individual income tax, the corporate income tax, and the sales and use taxes. The remaining taxes add layers of bureaucracy,
while garnering little revenue for the state. Simplifying the tax structure will help businesses understand and comply with tax codes, while simultaneously shrinking South Carolina's tax bureaucracy.
Source: 2010 Gubernatorial campaign website, nikkihaley.com "Issues"
Nov 2, 2010
Allen Weh:
Keep taxes in line with the states around us
As someone who has operated a successful business in New Mexico for 30 years, I understand what it takes to create jobs, meet a payroll and balance a budget in tough times. I also understand what bad government policies can do to
hamper or destroy business growth and handicap our efforts to attract new industry to New Mexico.
If New Mexicans really want a growing, healthy economy with good paying jobs in a variety of sectors, then we need leaders who will do three simple things: keep taxes in line with the states around us, make our state
government lean and efficient, and reduce unnecessary regulations.
The combination of excessive government spending, high taxes and irrational regulation kills jobs and makes us less competitive.
Source: 2010 Gubernatorial campaign website, AllenWeh2010.com
Nov 1, 2010
Andrew Cuomo:
Freeze state taxes; cap local taxes; cap spending
- Freeze Taxes: Because New Yorkers--already among the most taxed in the nation--cannot afford to pay more taxes than they do already, Andrew Cuomo will freeze taxes: he not raise and will veto any increase in personal or corporate
income taxes or sales tax.
- Impose a State Spending Cap: In order to address the financial crisis and permanently control State spending, a statutory and constitutional spending cap that requires the Governor to propose, and the
Legislature to enact, a budget that limits State Operating Funds growth to the rate of inflation is necessary.
- Impose a Local Property Tax Cap: Spending must also be controlled at the local level.
The local property tax cap would apply to all school districts and local governments and would be set at the lower of the inflation rate or two percent.
Source: 2010 gubernatorial campaign website, andrewcuomo.com
Nov 1, 2010
Charlie Baker:
Make MA taxes competitive with other states
[My economic plan] Getting Massachusetts Back in Business will:- Establish a simple and equitable tax system to send a strong message to the business community that Massachusetts is a business-friendly state [with a flat 5% business tax rate]
-
Make Massachusetts' tax policies competitive with other states so that jobs are created here.
- Provide businesses with a predictable set of rules on how to conduct business in Massachusetts, [including an] immediate moratorium on regulations.
-
Adopt a reasonable and effective statewide energy policy.
- Regional Economic Development: There are many regions of this state that are struggling well-beyond the Boston metropolitan area. Most notable are the former industrial cities that anchor these
regions which have been struggling with double digit unemployment figures for the past year and a half. The current approach to economic development in the state is leaving these cities and the surrounding regions behind.
Source: 2010 gubernatorial campaign website, charliebaker2010.com
Nov 1, 2010
Dan Malloy:
Fairer and more progressive sharing of taxation
I will initiate long overdue comprehensive tax reform. Reform will be guided by 5 key goals:- Be sustainable, comprehensive and address the balance of state & local taxation
- Provide for a fairer and more progressive sharing of taxation
- Ensure
a greater state share of local funding for schools
- Strategically generate job growth and encourage business development
- Relieve the local property tax burden on low and middle income seniors, veterans, and individuals who are disabled.
Source: 2010 gubernatorial campaign website, DanMalloy.com, "Policy"
Nov 1, 2010
Tom Foley:
Aggressively reduce spending so we can reduce taxes
As Governor, I will order a top to bottom review of state tax policy to ensure the way we tax our citizens and our businesses is fair & equitable, doesn't put us at a disadvantage versus other states, and supports strong economic growth and job creation.
- I will compare our tax rates and tax policy to other states to be sure our taxes are not driving businesses and working families away from Connecticut
- I will aggressively reduce spending so that we can reduce taxes and still comply with our
constitutional requirement to balance the state budget
- I will increase transparency so that Connecticut taxpayers aren't being hit with "stealth taxes" they cannot see, such as the gross receipts tax on gas stations
- I will work with the legislature
to agree on a bi-partisan, long term tax policy for Connecticut that is based on sound economic policy and fairness, and which puts an end to the old-world politics of pitting groups of citizens or regions of the state against each other.
Source: 2010 Gubernatorial campaign website tomfoley2010.com, "Plan"
Oct 9, 2010
Jill Stein:
Fees and sales taxes hit lower and middle income hardest
What if we stopped hiking taxes and fees that target ordinary people and instead balanced the budget through fairer taxes?Beacon Hill has allowed the budget to be balanced by raising a number of taxes and fees that hit working people hard.
They have raised the sales tax, college tuition, MBTA fares, and tobacco taxes. By cutting aid to cities and towns, legislators have forced hikes in property taxes.
When all state and local taxes are considered, lower and middle income people in
Massachusetts are paying at twice the rate of the top 1% highest income bracket. This is not a fair system, and Beacon Hill has made it even more unfair with tax hikes over the past decade.
Jill Stein will fight any attempt to balance the budget
through tax or fee hikes that hit ordinary taxpayers. She will stand for the fairness solution--which means closing any budget gap by asking higher-income taxpayers to pay something closer to the rate that most people have been experiencing for years.
Source: 2010 Gubernatorial Campaign website jillstein.org, "Issues"
Sep 29, 2010
Charlie Baker:
Signed the no-new taxes pledge
Charlie Baker chided Governor Patrick and Treasurer Cahill for admitting last night that their own tax increases are causing Massachusetts workers to be taxed too much, and criticized Patrick and Cahill for not signing the no-new taxes pledge.
Baker and his running-mate Richard Tisei are the only candidates in the race who have signed the pledge not to raise taxes if elected."The eight tax increases of the past four years have cost Massachusetts jobs," said Baker. "Governor Patrick and
Treasurer Cahill have been advocating for and pushing for those higher taxes for the past four years and it's time for a new team to take Massachusetts in a new direction."
Baker and Tisei have signed the "No New Taxes' pledge, reinforcing their plans
to turn Massachusetts' economy around by reforming and restructuring state government, rather than raising taxes. Baker supports reducing the income tax, sales tax and business tax rate to 5 percent and will push for those tax cuts upon taking office.
Source: 2010 gubernatorial campaign website press release
Sep 15, 2010
Rick Scott:
Reducing property tax by 1 mill saves $142 per homeowner
The property tax burden is Florida's #1 tax problem. I will tackle this problem head on--not impose "band-aid" solutions that provide temporary relief to one group of people: Reduce the statewide property tax (RLE) by $1.4 billion (from 5.29 mills to
4.29 mills, a 19% reduction in RLE). Savings from other key components of my 7 step plan will be used to replace those funds so not $1 is shifted away from our schools. A 1 mill reduction results in approximately a $142 savings for the average homeowner
Source: 2010 Gubernatorial campaign website, rickscottforflorida.com
Aug 19, 2010
Page last updated: Dec 03, 2018