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Wednesday, June 11, 2008

After Election Night It’s Clear: North Dakotans Don’t Want More Taxes

North Dakotans went to the polls last night and voted on some measures both statewide and local.  Perhaps the most interesting results for this observer were the voting down of tax measures in Minot, Grand Forks County and Cass County (Fargo).

In Minot voters decided not to divert proceeds to a new community bowl from a 1% sales tax that was established to fund the Northwest Area Water Supply project.  In Grand Forks County voters overwhelmingly (84% vs. 16%) voted down the Home Rule Charter (which would have eventually resulted in a half-cent sales tax increase).  In Cass County voters overwhelmingly (63% vs. 37%) voted down a half-cent sales tax increase which would have sent money to a privately-run board which would then use it for “economic development.”

So what do these three results in three of the state’s most populous areas tell us?  That North Dakotans are tired of taxes.  What should our political leaders then do in response to this fact?  Get behind tax relief.

To hear many political leaders in the state - both Democrat and, sadly enough, Republicans - tell it North Dakotans are just fine with the state’s level of taxation despite a record-setting balance in the state treasury and massive surpluses in the state budget.  These political leaders feel we should keep taxes in the state high to continue to pay for things like economic development.

The truth?  North Dakotans want tax relief, and any politician refusing to address that concern could well pay the consequences at the polls.

Comments

This is what the media elite at The Fargo Forum had to say about the rejection of the higher sales tax:

Sales tax

As voters were blowing away smoke, they also signaled they were in no mood for a countywide sales tax. No matter how sound the proposal for a half-cent science/tech development tax was, a combination of factors worked against it. Promoters had a tough time selling the concept of a tax that would have invested in the future. Jitters about the record-high cost of gasoline and rising food prices contributed to the tax’s defeat.

Yeah, the voters just have a case of the jitters and are “moody.”

Kevin on June 11, 2008 at 09:49 am

This is what the media elite at The Fargo Forum had to say about the rejection of the higher sales tax:

Sales tax

As voters were blowing away smoke, they also signaled they were in no mood for a countywide sales tax. No matter how sound the proposal for a half-cent science/tech development tax was, a combination of factors worked against it. Promoters had a tough time selling the concept of a tax that would have invested in the future. Jitters about the record-high cost of gasoline and rising food prices contributed to the tax’s defeat.

Yeah, the voters just have a case of the jitters and are “moody.”

Kevin on June 11, 2008 at 09:49 am
Avatar for brenarlo

This is great news for ND.

brenarlo on June 11, 2008 at 09:50 am

This is what the media elite at The Fargo Forum had to say about the rejection of the higher sales tax:

Sales tax

As voters were blowing away smoke, they also signaled they were in no mood for a countywide sales tax. No matter how sound the proposal for a half-cent science/tech development tax was, a combination of factors worked against it. Promoters had a tough time selling the concept of a tax that would have invested in the future. Jitters about the record-high cost of gasoline and rising food prices contributed to the tax’s defeat.

Yeah, the voters just have a case of the jitters and are “moody.”

Kevin on June 11, 2008 at 09:52 am

The site was having trouble, so the triple posting wasn’t Kevin’s fault.

It’s as if the voters are supposed to do their betters’ bidding anytime they ask. 

What was in it for the average guy?  Government should just quit pretending their smarter than everyone else.  They aren’t.


What’s going to happen to US industry when the global warming extremists like John McCain double the price of electricity?  I would think all these factories will close and set up in countries where they aren’t scared of technology.


The Whistler's signature
The Whistler on June 11, 2008 at 10:06 am
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