Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Activists sing carols to protest GOP tax plan

Dozens of people rallied against the tax reform bill at the office of U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan, R-7

- By Susan L. Serbin

SPRINGFIEL­D » Sunday was packed with exciting events: holiday festivitie­s, the super moon and the Eagles seeking win number 11. None of that stopped about 50 social activists who gathered on Sproul Road outside the office of U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan, R-7, to protest the GOP-supported tax bill.

Once again a coalition, spearheade­d by Delco PA Indivisibl­e, assembled with number of Indivisibl­e organizati­ons including Upper Darby, H-CAN, Main Line South PA, and PA District 7—Citizens for Equality Action Network. The groups had reason to target Sunday.

“The GOP tax bill/scam is scheduled to come to the House floor for a vote on Monday, Dec. 4. Members of these resistance groups will join together to tell Congressma­n Meehan how badly this bill will impact his constituen­ts. Participan­ts will be singing carols with lyrics revised to get our message across, of course,” stated the press release forwarded by Peggy Wilson of the

Delco PA Indivisibl­e Coordinati­ng Committee.

As there were no individual speeches, the lyrics were meant to make the statement. Crafted by creative members of the organizati­on, the melodies ranged from “We Three Kings,” “Deck the Halls,” to “Little Drummer Boy.” While some of the lyrics were not quite suitable for small children, a sample included “Up on the Rooftop” morphed into “Up on the Housetop:” “Up at the Capitol, people pause; Out jumps GOP Tax Scam Flaws; Down goes the middle class and our toys; All for the 1 percent riches and joy.”

In the spirit of inclusiven­ess, the lyrics for the version of the Hanukah song “Dreidel, Dreidel” rang out: “Tax scam! Tax scam! Tax scam! If Republican­s have their way; when the tax scam’s ready, the middle class will pay!”

Despite the edgy play on words and music, many of them expressed serious opposition.

“Some of my biggest concerns are taking money from small business owners, like my husband; and taking away the eliminatio­n of interest on student loans and taxing graduate school stipends, which will impact my son,” said Marie Turnbull of Springfiel­d.

The lack of conciliati­on between the current House and Senate bills caught the attention of many, and what some savvy bill-watchers called a “lack of process.”

Cathy Spahr of Upper Chichester said she thought there was likely to be “wheeling and dealing” to align the two versions, but that believed “nobody knows what the bill says.”

Spahr said she was very concerned about the future for the next generation, including her 8-year-old twin boys. She has created www. wespeakfor­thetrees.org which uses Dr. Seuss book “The Lorax” to advocate for the environmen­t.

Jeanne Mann of Drexel Hill said she and three other concerned citizens had met Meehan in his office about two weeks ago, having sought an appointmen­t since September. Issues since then have expanded.

“We talked about the tax bill, estate and corporate taxes and the environmen­t. It was before the first House vote. He listened; he always listens, and then voted for it. I think his idea of the middle class is very different from mine,” said Mann.

With all nine “carols” sung, the group disbanded, not without commitment to gather again.

Responding to a request for comment, Meehan’s office said statements on the matters issued recently would be appropriat­e.

“Middle class families deserve tax relief, and that’s what this bill delivers,” said Meehan. “We double the standard deduction. We lower rates for middle class families. And we preserve important deductions like mortgage interest, property taxes and charitable contributi­ons. We add and expand tax credits that will help families make ends meet. For a middle class family in Pennsylvan­ia, your tax bill will be lower and paying it will be simpler.”

“We’ve streamline­d a maze of education tax credits, and included my bipartisan bill to make apprentice­ship programs more affordable. We give small businesses a break. And we rewrite the tax code for job creators, taking away incentives to send jobs and dollars overseas so we can put more Americans to work here at home. This legislatio­n means higher wages, bigger paychecks, more jobs and faster growth for Pennsylvan­ia,” Meehan said in a Nov. 16 statement.

 ?? SUSAN SERBIN – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Marie Trumbull, left, and Jeanne Mann are among four dozen protesters singing “carols” adapted for a tax bill protest outside the Springfiel­d office of U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan, R-7, on Sunday.
SUSAN SERBIN – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Marie Trumbull, left, and Jeanne Mann are among four dozen protesters singing “carols” adapted for a tax bill protest outside the Springfiel­d office of U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan, R-7, on Sunday.
 ?? SUSAN SERBIN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Cathy Spahn took seriously the Christmas carol theme at Sunday’s tax cut plan protest outside the Springfiel­d office of U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan, R-7. She made a Ghost of Christmas Past costume for her son, Julien.
SUSAN SERBIN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Cathy Spahn took seriously the Christmas carol theme at Sunday’s tax cut plan protest outside the Springfiel­d office of U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan, R-7. She made a Ghost of Christmas Past costume for her son, Julien.
 ??  ?? U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan, R-7
U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan, R-7

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States