Lodi News-Sentinel

California is rolling in surplus cash, but legislator­s want to raise taxes anyway

- GEORGE SKELTON TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Political columnist George Skelton has covered government and politics for nearly 60 years and for The Los Angeles Times since 1974.

It's income tax time across America, but in the California Legislatur­e it is always tax time. Some Democrats never stop trying to raise taxes. It seems addictive.

Never mind that California­ns already pay the highest state taxes in the nation.

Moreover, Sacramento is hauling in so much revenue that the state government is accumulati­ng a huge surplus and is close to being legally forced to return some of the money to taxpayers.

Yet, during the young legislativ­e session lawmakers have already proposed raising taxes and fees by an unbelievab­le $234 billion annually, according to the California Tax Foundation. That's a research nonprofit founded decades ago by the California Taxpayers Assn., an antitax lobby.

Let's put that $234 billion in perspectiv­e. It's more than the entire $227-billion state budget Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed in January for the next fiscal year. He plans to revise the budget this week, no doubt upward.

A caveat on the tax total: I characteri­ze the figure as unbelievab­le because it is. It's an implausibl­e stretch crafted to serve as a two-by-four to awaken taxpayers and prod them to yell at lawmakers.

It's beyond the realm of conceivabi­lity that the vast majority of these tax proposals could be enacted into law.

Neverthele­ss, the foundation did California­ns a service by laying out what could happen if tax-happy lawmakers were left to their own devices. Fortunatel­y, there are pragmatic leaders, moderate Democrats and conservati­ve Republican­s to block the two-thirds majority votes mostly required.

And Newsom is leery of any major tax hike, especially when he's fighting off a recall attempt and is up for reelection next year.

"We're proposing no tax increases, we're balancing the budget," he asserted in January.

Newsom hasn't said much about it since, but senior advisor Dee Dee Myers, who heads the governor's Office of Business and Economic Developmen­t, recently tried to quash the notion.

"The governor's made clear he's not going to raise taxes," Myers told an economic summit sponsored by the Oakland Metropolit­an Chamber of Commerce.

"There will be no increase in income tax, no California wealth tax, not interested in raising corporate taxes or capital gains taxes."

That sounds concrete. But David Kline, spokesman for the tax foundation, says his organizati­on has learned to be skeptical. "It's our view that everything is a threat until the Legislatur­e is out of session," he says.

"Taxes have a way of popping up during budget negotiatio­ns. Bills that seem dead have a way of coming back to life. There's always the possibilit­y when legislatio­n is being considered that just about anything can happen.

"One significan­t factor is that just by introducin­g large numbers of tax increases, some lawmakers are sending a message to business owners and higher-income earners that California may go after them in the future.

"If you see that taxes are constantly being proposed in California, but not in other states that are welcoming you with open arms, that's going to be a factor in your business considerat­ion. It causes concern." That's indisputab­le logic. Newsom's Department of Finance announced Friday that for the first time in history, California lost population last year — 0.46%. The chief causes were a decline in foreign immigratio­n, COVID-19 deaths and a slowdown in births.

There also were more people leaving for other states than moving to California from elsewhere in the U.S. But this was a minor cause of population loss — not a mass exodus, as Newsom's critics allege.

We aren't losing high-income people fleeing state taxes, according to the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California. More affluent people have been arriving than departing. We're mostly losing low- to middle-income people who can't afford to live here.

But there'd surely be a rush to the border by high-income California­ns and businesses if Sacramento ever began raising taxes as proposed by some lawmakers.

California­ns already pay the nation's highest state income, sales and gasoline taxes. The state's corporate tax is near the top. We've got relatively low local property taxes, but they still rank No. 16 in the country.

By far the biggest proposed tax hike reported by the tax foundation would raise $200 billion annually to finance a single-payer "Guaranteed Healthcare for All" program. But that bill, AB 1400, doesn't actually have a funding mechanism yet. The foundation based its estimate on previous such proposals. And sponsors don't plan to push the new bill until 2022, an election year.

So, you can scratch it — for now.

More often discussed is a socalled wealth tax that would raise $22 billion by imposing an annual 1% tax on assets exceeding $50 million. Even if AB 310 passed — which is highly unlikely — Newsom has signaled he'd veto it.

AB 1253 seems like a sarcastic joke. It would generate $6.5 billion by raising the state's highest-in-the-nation 13.3% top income tax rate to 16.8% — and stimulate the exit of wealthy California­ns.

A few of the relatively minor tax hikes make sense. For example, AB 395 would tax unhealthfu­l electronic cigarettes and spend the $22 million on grants for disadvanta­ged students seeking healthcare careers.

But Democrats should be careful not to scare off too many people — from the state or the party at election time.

Sacramento is rolling in money. It doesn't need big tax increases. It needs more efficient spending.

Republican­s have been screaming that for years. They're not always wrong.

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