By Patrick Poole
© 2000 WorldNetDaily.com
NAHSVILLE, Tenn. -- Police cars blockaded Tennessee state capitol
entrances and troopers patrolled legislative hallways this week as the
state legislature found itself under siege by thousands of angry taxpayers
upset at a plan to implement a state income tax.
Tennessee is currently one of only nine states without a state income
tax. Opponents of the measure, which would assess a 5 percent tax on any
income above $100,000, are skeptical that legislators would maintain that
high an exemption threshold for very long.
As protestors began to gather outside the legislative chambers Monday
evening, several legislators were taken away by ambulance and hospitalized
for blood pressure and heart problems as tensions rose and tempers flared.
By Tuesday morning, tax protestors were brandishing signs reading,
"Let's send them all to the ER!"
Trouble began brewing Friday evening as the state income tax proposal
emerged from a legislative conference committee considering the state
budget after local news shows had already aired.
Legislators supporting the income tax had hoped that a vote would be
taken on the proposal Saturday morning to avoid giving anti-tax groups
time to mount a repeat of the tax revolt that occurred last November, when
an earlier income-tax measure died as taxpayers besieged legislative
offices with tens of thousands of calls and e-mails every hour.
But the hopes of income-tax supporters were dashed when two of
Nashville's competing talk radio stations, WLAC
and WTN, joined forces and served as
the catalyst for opposition to the legislative proposal.
Speaking to WorldNetDaily and barely audible above the virtually
non-stop horn honking, WLAC's morning show host Steve Gill gestured to the
standstill traffic encircling the state capitol and said, "Do you
hear that? That's the sound of freedom."
Phil Valentine, Gill's
afternoon show counterpart, chided legislators on-air for conducting most
of the legislative discussion regarding the state budget behind closed
doors.
"If this is such good public policy, why are they afraid to do it
in public?" Valentine said.
While it appeared Monday that income-tax supporters had enough votes to
push the measure through both houses, support crumbled as the tax protests
grew.
"These legislators have received a rude awakening in the past few
days," said Darryl Ankarlo, morning drive time host for WTN.
"They're realizing that taxpayers are tired of politicians picking
their pockets at every turn."
Ankarlo and his WTN colleague, Dave
Ramsey began broadcasting their respective programs from a remote
radio site located at the entrance of the legislative plaza, where they
could wave to supporters driving by. They would regularly announce on-air
the position of state legislators on the income-tax proposal and provide
telephone and e-mail information for constituents to contact their
representatives.
The effort to pass a state income tax is being led by Republican Gov.
Don Sundquist, who won two gubernatorial races handily in 1994 and 1998
after promising to prevent an income tax from ever being passed. But less
than three months after his 1998 re-election, Sundquist found that a
runaway budget, driven by the largest state Medicaid program in the
country, threatened to bankrupt the state. TennCare, the state's Medicaid
program, now covers one out of every four citizens in the state and
consumes one-quarter of the state's annual budget.
Rejecting calls to cut his proposed $18.1 billion budget, Sundquist has
threatened to withhold public works projects in legislators' districts if
they failed to go along with his plan. Sundquist is backed by a coalition
of liberal special interest groups, state contractors, road builders and
state employee unions, who are pushing for the income tax to finance a 6
percent pay raise for the coming fiscal year.
One group, Tennesseans for Fair
Taxation, is praising the current tax proposal as the first step
toward imposing a state income tax on the whole population, not just those
earning more than $100,000.
"We will continue to push forward until we achieve comprehensive
tax reform," said Nan Lloyd, a Tennesseans for Fair Taxation
spokesperson. The organization has even posted an online tax
calculator to tell families how much more they would end up paying
under various state income-tax schemes.
One national taxpayer group has jumped into the Tennessee tax fight.
Chad Cowan, director of communications for the Washington, D.C.-based Americans
for Tax Reform told WorldNetDaily that election promises made by
Tennessee legislators who vowed at election time that they would oppose
the state income tax need to be kept.
"The people of Tennessee have spoken, and they have said loudly
and clearly that they do not want a state income tax. The governor and
legislature would be wise to listen to them," Cowan said.
Americans for Tax Reform named Sundquist "Taxpayer
Villain of the Month" last November in response to his
recommended state income-tax plan and corresponding $400 million state
spending increase. Sundquist's income-tax effort was also panned recently
by Steve Moore, a columnist for "National Review," who wrote
that he is "easily
the worst governor in America."
As a result of the daily tax protests, the income-tax proposal appeared
dead last night after the tax measure's chief legislative supporter
announced he was throwing in the towel. Both houses subsequently referred
the budget back to the conference committee responsible for crafting a
compromise. Committee members were given explicit instructions to return
today with a bill that would meet legislative (and voter) approval.
Legislators are working on a June 30 deadline, when the new fiscal year
will begin. Sundquist has threatened to veto any budget that does not
include an income tax, but only a simple majority vote in both houses is
needed to override the governor's veto. Most of the members in both the
House and Senate face re-election in November.
As word of the income tax's demise spread among the crowd gathered at
the state capitol last night, car horns continued to blare and traffic
remained at a standstill.
One anonymous protestor at yesterday's rally, who said that he had
taken the day off work and had driven three hours to come to Nashville,
spoke to WorldNetDaily as the crowd thinned and the sun began to set over
the Nashville skyline.
"This is a great victory for all Tennesseans," he said.
"The people spoke, and we forced our elected representatives to
listen. Could anything be more American?"
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