The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Malloy’s been swinging for the fences on taxes

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Hank Aaron is baseball’s career home run leader with 755 — excluding one player from the performanc­e drug era — despite the fact that, in his best season, he tallied only 47, placing him 77th on the single-season record list.

Outgoing Gov. Dannel P. Malloy is Connecticu­t’s Hank Aaron of tax hikes, the undisputed career leader, and he has a much better single-season record than Aaron. Malloy’s $2.9 billion in career tax hikes place him way ahead of Lowell Weicker, whose $2 billion increase in 1991 earned him both second place on the career list and the top position for single-season performanc­e.

With his $1.95 billion tax jolt in 2011, Malloy is just $71 million, or 3.5 percent, behind Weicker on the single-season record list. Malloy’s next best yearly number was $945 million in 2015, just $75 million behind Jodi Rell’s fourth place $1.0 billion increase in 2009. (All amounts are adjusted for inflation.)

Notwithsta­nding this reality, last week, the nonpartisa­n Connecticu­t Mirror lambasted Connecticu­t Republican­s for claiming that Malloy is “to blame for the top two tax hikes in Connecticu­t history.”

Of course, the Mirror is technicall­y correct, but most reasonable people would overlook this technical error in view of Malloy’s huge lead in the career ranking.

In addition, Weicker claimed his single-season record 27 years ago. No one carries around in their everyday consciousn­ess both the exact nominal number from so long ago and the precise inflation adjustment factor to convert it into current dollars.

And the third-ranking singleyear increase predates the institutio­n of the income tax in 1991. That’s ancient history. Let’s exclude it.

So, were Malloy’s two tax increases only slightly larger, he would rank first and third in the single-season rankings for the income tax era.

Neverthele­ss, the Mirror proceeded to charge the GOP with a capital crime, soliciting quotes from three objective observers. Malloy’s spokeswoma­n called the GOP’s “top-two” claim “an outright lie.” Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Ned Lamont’s campaign manager called it “a bundle of lies.” Malloy’s twotime campaign manager offered righteous instructio­n “When you intentiona­lly misstate facts, that’s a lie.”

The Mirror not only charged the GOP with making an error but implied that it was engaging in a campaign of deception. “As most of us know, if you say something often enough, people will start to believe you. Worse yet, they’ll repeat it.”

Pursuing this disinforma­tion campaign angle, the Mirror was expansive in parceling out reproach. Two business associatio­n leaders and one think tank leader were fingered and shamed for perpetuati­ng “the GOP lie.”

Curiously, in another article last week, the Mirror leaned over backward to explain away Malloy’s 2011 tax increase. In a timeline of the biggest tax increases in state history, the Mirror placed the 2011 increase under the header “Malloy inherits a $3.7 billion deficit.” While obviously designed to absolve Malloy of blame, neverthele­ss, the header is fair and accurate.

However, symmetry would suggest that, if we look at what Malloy inherited, we should look also at what he is bequeathin­g his successor.

However, symmetry would suggest that, if we look at what Malloy inherited, we should look also at what he is bequeathin­g his successor. Malloy’s own administra­tion projects a $4.6 billion budget deficit in the next biennium.

That’s despite his career record tax increase of $2.9 billion, which, in turn, doesn’t include the equivalent of a third big Malloy-era tax increase. The current biennial budget includes the eliminatio­n or reduction of various tax credits, deductions and exemptions totaling an estimated $350 million.

Nor does it include the current $750 million raid on the U.S. Treasury in the form of a Kafkaesque hospital tax scheme that Malloy introduced in 2011.

In the current budget, Connecticu­t is levying a $900 million tax on hospitals, sending $600 million right back to them in the form of Medicaid “supplement­al payments,” which qualify for $450 million in federal matching funds. The state is netting $750 million (the $300 not returned plus the $450). If ever the federal government were to shut this down…

Despite the technical error in the “top two” charge, the GOP is absolutely correct to label Malloy the tax hike record-holder of all time. The tragedy is that we’re not talking about baseball, but rather numbers that threaten the very survival of the state. Individual­s and businesses are fleeing, having endured massive tax increases under Malloy and, given his “bequest,” seeing no possible end to them for years to come.

 ?? Linda Conner Lambeck / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Gov. Dannel P. Malloy addresses school superinten­dents in Hartford on Aug. 15.
Linda Conner Lambeck / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Gov. Dannel P. Malloy addresses school superinten­dents in Hartford on Aug. 15.

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