The Mercury News

Report: Gas tax hike would hit Trump states hardest

- By John McCormick

A federal gas tax increase to help pay for upgrading U.S. roads and bridges would fall hardest on states won by Donald Trump in 2016, according to a report released Tuesday by two groups tied to the billionair­e Koch brothers that oppose the increase.

The impact of raising the gas tax by 25 cents per gallon, as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has suggested and Trump reportedly has offered to support, would vary widely from state to state because of difference­s in the current tax rate and fuel consumptio­n, the report by Americans for Prosperity and by Freedom Partners shows. Of the top 10 states identified by the groups as facing the highest percentage increase in total gas tax liability, Trump won nine.

“Every American stands to lose under this proposal, but some would be more heavily impacted than others,” says the report from the two organizati­ons, part of the political network led by Charles and David Koch.

Raising the gas tax is likely to face hurdles in Congress, where many Republican­s have expressed reservatio­ns. Opposition to the tax increase puts the Koch political network at odds with the Chamber of Commerce — the nation’s largest business lobby — which supports the move as the fairest and most efficient way to raise more money for U.S. infrastruc­ture needs.

Opposition to the tax increase proposal also potentiall­y puts the Koch affiliated groups in conflict with Trump, who previously has said he’s open to raising the levy and last week unveiled a long-awaited plan to generate at least $1.5 trillion in new infrastruc­ture spending. Proposals to hike the gas tax come as questions grow about where funding for upgrading infrastruc­ture will come from after the Trump administra­tion rolled out a plan that envisions federal funds mostly as seed money to spur states, localities and the private sector to spend the balance of the promised investment.

Trump surprised a bipartisan group of House and Senate committee leaders during a Feb. 14 White House meeting by offering to support a 25-cent increase in the tax on gas and diesel fuel, according to Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware, the top Democrat on the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee. Republican­s on Capitol Hill quickly expressed opposition and said prospects for the first boost of the tax in a quarter century appear slim.

The Koch-affiliated groups used data from the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion, U.S. Census Bureau, American Petroleum Institute and other sources to make their calculatio­ns. Their rankings for percent change were based on the state’s current total gas levy, including state and federal taxes, compared with the total under the proposed hike.

In raw dollars, the report found that Mississipp­i would face the largest increase in annual new gas tax burden per household ($391), followed by Wyoming ($380) and South Carolina ($377). Trump won all three.

The report doesn’t specifical­ly identify the hardesthit states as having been won by Trump. But their findings illustrate the impact of a gas tax increase on areas where the president dominated in the 2016 vote.

These are the states facing largest potential percentage increase over current gas tax proposal, according to the two groups: Alaska, 81 percent; Oklahoma, 71 percent; Missouri, 70 percent; Mississipp­i, New Mexico and Arizona, 67 percent; Texas and Louisiana, 65 percent; and South Carolina and Alabama, 64 percent.

Those with the lowest state taxes would see the largest bump because they’re starting from a smaller base. The only state among the top 10 that Trump didn’t win is New Mexico.

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