It was a tough year in the Mississippi legislature for Conservatives. We started this year hopeful that real conservative legislation like a full personal income tax elimination bill would be passed into law.
But in the moderate at best Mississippi Legislature, hoping for a full income tax elimination was apparently a pipe dream. A proposed bill that would have taken steps towards a complete personal income tax elimination in the state was discussed in the MS House of Representatives among the Republicans in Caucus meetings, and it was Republicans, not Democrats, that fought the bill to its ultimate demise.
The bill would have required a 3/5 majority vote for passage, meaning all Republicans in the MS House of Representatives would need to vote in favor of the bill for it to pass. Surely no Republican would fight against a tax cut, right?
The MS GOP’s platform states in clear language that we should support the reduction of the tax burden for our citizens:
Mississippi Republicans believe that people, not government, know best how to spend their own money. When people keep more of their hard-earned money, jobs and economic growth will flourish in the free market system.
Mississippi Republicans support the reduction of the tax burden on our citizens. We believe in the reduction of taxes to empower taxpayers, to create a more competitive environment for job creation, to incentivize work, entrepreneurship, and investment, and to prevent the excessive growth of government.
But it was a dozen Republicans’ betrayal to our Party’s Platform of cutting taxes that killed the only chance of an income tax elimination bill this year. It’s apparent that at least a dozen Republicans in the MS House of Representatives are either unaware of their own party’s platform, or they are deliberately hostile to it.
Determining where a candidate stands on this issue is extremely important. States without an income tax draw more businesses and have stronger economies. Do not vote for anyone who does not understand that our state suffers when government takes your money.
Here are two reports from the Magnolia Tribune about the effort to eliminate the state income tax.
I want a list of the Reps that voted no!
From my understanding a bill was never released from committee to vote on as such their can not be a list of reps for or against it
According to Lamar
Quote
“There’s a small group of those in the Republican caucus that don’t want to take it up this year,” said Lamar. “We’ve also been put on notice that the Democrats are going to block vote against it.”