Too many taxes, especially today
Tom Harman
April 15 has come and is going: Tax day. As we struggle to make ends
meet, it is fitting to reflect upon just how much the government
takes out of our pocket each year in taxes.
Thanks to payroll deductions, most people cannot grasp how much
they are actually paying in taxes each year. An annual study by the
nonpartisan Tax Foundation notes that Californians do not begin to
take home any money until April 13. In other words, the nation’s
workforce spends the first four months of the year working for the
government. Californians deserve a break.
Don’t think your tax bill is fully paid once you complete your
1040 form. You are actually paying taxes from the moment you wake up
in the morning until the moment you fall asleep at night. Every day,
you pay taxes on the water to brush your teeth, the car you drive to
work, the long-distance phone call you place to your family, the
cable television programs you watch at night and the lights you use
to read before going to bed. Californians are over-taxed.
Family-owned businesses are struggling to keep their doors open,
having to pay huge increases in premiums for a flawed workers’
compensation system, having to comply with burdensome regulations,
and pay some of the country’s highest taxes just for the privilege of
conducting business in California.
Although taxpayers are also struggling to pay their tax bills,
some in Sacramento believe it’s not enough. A whole host of proposals
are being considered this year that would burden taxpayers even more
with higher income taxes, sales taxes, and user fees.
As a matter of principle, I believe it is better to spend less
than tax more. We have experienced record budget problems over the
past three years because of the poor fiscal management of the
majority party, not because taxpayers did not send in enough of their
hard-earned money to Uncle Sam.
We can start restoring fiscal order to California by prioritizing
the people’s interests over those of special interests. Assembly
Republicans have formed the Joint Republican Task Force on
Eliminating Government Waste to investigate ways to run state
government more efficiently. We’re holding a series of “Suggestion
Box Town Hall” forums across California to hear the people’s
common-sense ideas on eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse in state
spending.
The best way to force politicians in Sacramento to abandon their
wasteful ways is to make it harder to raise taxes on hard-working
families. Californians should not be forced to foot the bill for five
years of overspending.
Raising taxes is exactly the wrong approach to solve our budget
woes. Individuals know far better than Sacramento how their money
should be spent and we should allow them the extra income to invest
in the California economy.
As we mark another year of over-taxation, let the message be
clear: Californians need a break.
* EDITORS’ NOTE: Tom Harman represents the 67th Assembly District,
which includes Huntington Beach.
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