Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

GOP should propose gaming tax increase

- VICTOR JOECKS Contact Victor Joecks at vjoecks@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @victorjoec­ks on Twitter.

POLITICS is about building coalitions to advance core principles. That’s why Republican­s should propose increasing the gaming tax and lowering the sales tax.

The Vegas Chamber recently released endorsemen­ts in statewide races. You might think its selected candidates would support the values it claims to champion, such as fostering “economic growth and job creation.” Nope. The Chamber endorsed Gov. Steve Sisolak. You may remember him as the man who kept businesses closed for months in 2020. His initial shutdown order led to the highest unemployme­nt rate — a staggering 28.2 percent — of any state since consistent records began in 1976. Two years later, Nevada’s unemployme­nt system is still struggling to pay claims.

Even though it was wrong, his initial decision was defensible. There were many unknowns at the beginning of the coronaviru­s pandemic. But as other states reopened, Sisolak kept Nevada shut down. Even after reopening, he kept imposing restrictio­ns. Little wonder Nevada still has one of the highest unemployme­nt rates in the country.

For a business group to endorse a governor with such a record is stunning. But it fits a long-running pattern. The Chamber routinely endorses Democrats and Republican­s who vote for higher taxes and more regulation­s. During the 2015 legislativ­e session, the group endorsed the largest tax increase in Nevada history, including the creation of the commerce tax.

This is a problem for conservati­ve candidates. It’s much harder to win when groups that should be your ideologica­l allies support candidates who actively oppose your supposedly shared interests.

Instead of standing up for its stated principles, the Chamber keeps trying to curry favor with Democrats and big-government Republican­s. This strategy is akin to a sheep bribing a wolf to eat it last. The gaming industry, which dominates Nevada’s economy, loves this approach.

This reality necessitat­es a strategic shift among small-government Republican­s. The foundation­al principle of fiscal conservati­sm is limited, accountabl­e government. That requires some tax revenue, although less than Nevada takes in now.

Notice the key ideal isn’t keeping one specific tax low. Ideally, all taxes will be low. But low taxes on a particular industry are a byproduct, not a goal. That means there’s space to maneuver on specific taxes. For instance, Nevada has one of the highest sales taxes in the country. Our gaming tax is one of the lowest.

Republican­s should propose a revenue-neutral tax restructur­ing. Increase the gaming tax to offset a half or one-percentage point drop in the sales tax. You could increase it further to raise the threshold of the commerce tax or eliminate it.

You could remove the 8 percent property tax cap on major properties along the Strip while lowering the cap on residentia­l properties to 2 percent. Raise the room tax to offset the sales tax increase that goes toward more cops in Clark County. For good measure, raise taxes on trial lawyers while reducing the tax on car registrati­ons.

These ideas would likely poll above 80 percent, especially if the gaming industry keeps performing well. If the gamers attack, Republican­s could claim that corporatio­ns are attacking them for fighting for the working class. Electorall­y, that’s a good trade. It would help Republican­s continue to woo those voters.

Imagine how much fun a Republican could have running for governor on a platform like this.

Being pro-free market means being pro-competitio­n, not reflexivel­y pro-big business. Many large corporatio­ns want to use the power of government to enrich themselves at the expense of their competitor­s and the general population.

That certainly happens in Nevada. Republican­s should shift their policies and priorities accordingl­y.

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