From Citizen Outreach:
By: Chuck Muth
NAACP FIGHTS FOR BUSSING
The Regional Transportation Commission (RTC) of Washoe County is in contract talks with the Teamsters this week at John Ascuaga’s Nugget in Sparks. And what cataclysmic issue is of such monumental concern in the negotiations that it warranted a full-scale press release this morning? Wages? Benefits? Working conditions? Safety? The cost of a gallon of petro? Nope. The Martin Luther King day bus schedule. Huh? Yep. Read all about it HERE on Muth’s Truths.
IT’S CALLED CHECKS AND BALANCES
The Founding Fathers were geniuses. They knew the executive branch nor the legislative branch nor the judicial branch of government could be trusted implicitly, so they set up a system of checks and balances to keep any one branch from taking control of the government from the people. I mention this because a lot of folks have been hammering Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons over his “no new taxes” pledge to the point where, if stories yesterday were accurate, he might be starting to buckle under the pressure.
As you may recall, the gaming industry and the teachers union are reportedly close to a deal whereby the union will abandon its effort to gather enough signatures on a petition to hike the gaming tax some 44 percent (an indication that they might not be on target to get enough signatures by the May 20 deadline) in return for the Legislature putting an “advisory question” on the ballot asking the people if it’s OK for the Legislature to raise the hotel room tax instead – which would primarily hit out-of-state tourists who will have no vote on the tax hike.
In other words, taxation without representation. But that’s another argument for another day.
But here’s the thing: Because of the system of checks and balances we enjoy in this state, the ultimate decision on whether or not to raise taxes lies with the Legislature, not the governor. Indeed, even uber-liberals such as Assemblywoman Sheila Leslie (D-Reno) acknowledge, as she is quoted in this morning’s Reno Gazette-Journal as saying, that “we do not live in a monarchy and the legislative branch is equal to the executive branch.”
In reality, however, when it comes to raising taxes the legislative branch is actually MORE equal. You see, the Legislature, not the governor, gets the final word. The Legislature, by a 2/3 vote, can approve any tax hike, including one to jack up the taxes on our already beleaguered tourists. And the governor, honoring the promise he made to the people, could and should then veto any such bill. But the matter wouldn’t end there. The Legislature, you see, could then over-ride the governor’s veto by the same 2/3 vote it needed to pass the tax hike in the first place.
So those who want to raise taxes, rather than cut spending and lay off non-essential government workers, should really get off the governor’s back and instead hammer the Legislature. After all, Gov. Gibbons campaigned for office promising not to raise taxes; the same can’t be said for most legislators who steadfastly refuse to make such a bold fiscally conservative commitment to voters and then run on it.
And instead of buckling and trying to find “loopholes” to get around his pledge – like this ill-advised and pledge-breaking “advisory question” scheme – the governor should simply tell everyone over and over and over again that if it wants to, the Legislature should go ahead and pass a tax hike with a 2/3 majority, he’ll then veto it like he promised, and then they can over-ride his veto and impose yet higher taxes on Nevada’s “working families” (isn’t that the term the Left always uses?). The governor can then run for re-election in 2010 as having kept his word not to raise our taxes and campaign against the 2/3 of the Legislature who did.
And may the best protector of the taxpayer win.
FAMOUS LAST WORDS
“Chuck Muth doesn’t understand the concept of the single-front war. Muth, the former Republican but solid conservative, has three targets in his sights. He is running ads against the teachers’ attempt to raise the gaming tax for education – Muth hates taxes more than Jim Gibbons does, which I’ll get to in a moment. Muth also is going after government employees and their travel, submitting requests for information to state folks. That will be something to see. And, finally, he is going after the governor for not being tax-pure, for contemplating support for a room tax increase if it goes on the ballot first. Muth says that violates a pledge Gibbons signed. If Muth isn’t careful, he may have to leave the state. Again.”
- Flashpoint, 5/10/08
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