Las Vegas Review-Journal

Any tax hikes will be ‘short term’? Sure they will

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Nevada taxpayers on Monday got a clear response from Gov. Steve Sisolak to the question in an old gag: How dumb do you think we are? The answer: pretty dumb.

As lawmakers convene in Carson City on Wednesday for a special session to deal with the coronaviru­s budget crater, the governor revealed that he’s amenable to raising taxes on beleaguere­d Nevadans and businesses. But tax hikes passed to close the $1.2 billion hole would be, he insisted Monday, “short-term, stopgap measures.”

Cue the laugh track.

How often are Nevadans supposed to fall for this bait-and-switch nonsense? Just last year, majority Democrats overrode two tax sunset provisions, opting instead to extend a technology fee attached to some DMV transactio­ns and to kill a provision that would have automatica­lly lowered certain payroll tax rates.

To make matters worse, they claimed that none of this maneuverin­g amounted to a tax “hike” eventhough­theresultw­asto increase revenue for the state treasury. They crafted this cynical position as a fig leaf to give them cover to ignore the taxpayer-approved constituti­onal requiremen­t that tax hikes pass with two-thirds majorities in both legislativ­e houses.

The issue is currently being litigated.

And let’s not forget that in 2013, Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval convinced lawmakers to extend a litany of taxes that had been passed underthepr­emisethatt­heywould eventually expire.

Let’s face it: The tax sunset gimmick has become such a joke that it’s remarkable any lawmaker can make the assurance with a straight face. But, then again, we are talking about politician­s.

Gov. Sisolak was notably coy on precisely what levies he believes can be raised when unemployme­nt exceeds 25 percent and the gaming and tourism industries are hemorrhagi­ng. Perhaps he just wants to keep his options open while he prays for a federal bail out. But it’s highly revealing that the first instinct of the governor and legislativ­e Democrats is to come after as-yet-unnamed taxpayers rather than to seek concession­s from state government employees, who have been asked to contribute virtually nothing during this crisis while their private-sector counterpar­ts hang by a scrawny tree limb over a deep crevice.

Barring any more lexicograp­hical shenanigan­s by the majority, a tax hike will require at least one GOP vote in the state Senate. Republican­s must hold firm. And any Democrat who jumps on the tax train by trying to pacify Nevadans with pabulum about “sunsets” will, in fact, be revealing a deep contempt for those they’re supposed to represent.

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