Los Angeles Times

Republican hypocrisy on taxes

- In sacramento

California Republican­s seem to have conflictin­g tax philosophi­es. Or maybe they’re just outright hypocritic­al.

They’re trying to gain political mileage by squawking about Sacramento Democrats raising the state gas tax to repair roads.

In an effort to turn out Republican voters in 2018, the GOP is pushing a ballot initiative to scuttle the gas tax hike. And it’s trying to recall a Democratic senator who voted for the increase.

But they’re not voicing a peep of protest about Washington Republican­s attempting to take away federal tax breaks used by millions of middle-class California­ns. President Trump and the GOP are scooping up money to lower taxes for big corporatio­ns.

The federal tax hits would hurt many California­ns a lot worse than the modest hike in state gas taxes.

Eliminatin­g the federal income tax deduction for state taxes and capping local property tax write-offs at $10,000 would especially smack California­ns. So would limiting mortgage interest deductions on future home purchases to loans of no more than $500,000.

That’s because California has the highest state income taxes in the nation. And home purchasing costs in some regions — the Southland coast and the Bay Area, especially — are practicall­y out of sight. We’ve become very accustomed to deducting those big expenditur­es on our federal income tax returns.

Some data: About 6 million California taxpayers — one-third of the total — itemized deductions on their 2015 federal tax returns, taking an average of $18,400 in deductions for state and local taxes. That amounted to $113 billion in deductions for all of California, according to the state Finance Department.

For middle-class taxpayers with incomes from $50,000 to $150,000, the average deduction for state and local taxes was about $10,400. Of that, $6,100 was for the state income tax and $4,300 for property taxes.

The U.S. House Republican plan retains property tax deductions up to $10,000, so most new homes worth less than about $900,000 would still be fully covered. But interest on only $500,000 of the mortgage would be deductible. And none of the state income tax would be.

How it all shakes out will vary from taxpayer to taxpayer, from region to region. Standard deductions would be nearly doubled, but personal exemptions eliminated. There’d be fewer tax brackets. Medical savings accounts and alimony deductions would be quashed. Lots of calculatin­g to do.

Some people would gain. They’d probably be wealthy. But millions would lose, many of them middle-income itemizers.

One thing is for sure: The California gas tax and vehicle fee hikes, by comparison, are penny-ante. The state Finance Department estimates the average annual cost per driver at $117.

A 12-cent-a-gallon gas tax increase took effect last week, along with a 20-cent boost in diesel fuel. That will cost motorists an average $69 a year. On Jan. 1, there’ll be a new annual fee based on a vehicle’s value, ranging from $25 to $175. The average is $48. And beginning in 2020, there’ll be a $100 annual fee on electric cars.

Those taxes and fees are supposed to raise $5.2 billion a year, or $52 billion over a decade. At least motorists will be seeing gradual improvemen­t in road conditions. The state estimates there’s a $130-billion backlog in transporta­tion maintenanc­e.

By contrast, losing the federal deduction for income taxes and capping the property tax write-off could cost California­ns into the thousands of dollars in higher federal taxes. But, hey, corporate tax rates would be slashed to 20% from 35%. And, over 10 years, $1.5 trillion would be added to the national debt.

Don’t get me wrong. As I’ve written previously, I see nothing unjust about dumping the deduction for state and local taxes. There’s no credible justificat­ion for the feds subsidizin­g California’s high levies by making them less painful.

Many argue that California sends more tax money to Washington than it gets back in benefits, so federal subsidies of its state and local taxes are fair. But I don’t buy it. Fairness has nothing to do with it. We get less back from Washington mainly because California is more prosperous and younger than most states. So we pay higher taxes while being entitled to less Social Security, etc.

But voting to help corporate America while hurting millions of middle-class California­ns is politicall­y risky. They haven’t voted yet, but I haven’t noticed any GOP House member from California coming out against the bill either.

There are seven California Republican House members in competitiv­e districts who would be handing their Democratic challenger­s a big fat target by voting for the tax bill.

“In a campaign context, opposing the gas tax is not going to sufficient­ly counter voting to eliminate state and local tax deductions,” Republican strategist Rob Stutzman says. “Those are not equitable issues that wash out.”

Democratic strategist Bill Carrick: “California is ground zero for Democrats to get a bunch of House seats back [and regain control]. But if Republican candidates are going to have to defend their voting for higher taxes, that’s a bad start running in a district that voted for Hillary Clinton.”

All seven of those endangered Republican incumbents represent districts that voted for Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump.

“It’s a pretty-easy-toundersta­nd campaign argument: Congressma­n ‘X’ voted to raise your taxes,” Carrick adds. “It strikes right at the Republican base.”

Republican politician­s need some consistenc­y. They can’t convincing­ly justify raising millions of people’s income taxes while bemoaning a bump in gas taxes. That’s called hypocrisy.

 ?? Michael Reynolds EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP is f lanked by House Republican leaders Paul Ryan, left, and Kevin Brady after the unveiling of the GOP tax plan last week.
Michael Reynolds EPA/Shuttersto­ck PRESIDENT TRUMP is f lanked by House Republican leaders Paul Ryan, left, and Kevin Brady after the unveiling of the GOP tax plan last week.
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 ?? J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press ?? CALIFORNIA Republican­s are trying to scuttle an increase in the state gas tax while working to cut federal tax breaks. Above, House Speaker Paul Ryan.
J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press CALIFORNIA Republican­s are trying to scuttle an increase in the state gas tax while working to cut federal tax breaks. Above, House Speaker Paul Ryan.

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