Tax Revolt

A tax revolt is a political struggle to repeal, limit, or roll back a government-imposed tax. In the United States, it is often used to refer to a series of anti-tax state initiative campaigns, which have been particularly popular in the West. The first of these was California's Proposition 13, sponsored by Howard Jarvis and passed overwhelmingly by voters in 1978, which drastically limited property tax levels in the state. In subsequent years, the state initiative process, initially championed by Populists and progressives, has been increasingly used for such purposes by conservative and libertarian political forces. Notable examples include a series of initiatives in Oregon (see Oregon tax revolt) and Washington (see Tim Eyman), and the Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TABOR) in Colorado. Critics charge that these initiatives have wreaked havoc on state governments and have been partly responsible for recent fiscal crises in many states; some have argued those consequences were intended -- that the actual motivation behind slashing taxes is to "starve the beast".

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
ellis clarke
amoy gardens
rockit
bbspot
3773 smithsonian
d.r. and quinch
elizabeth israel
st. cloud state university
ludmila pajduskov
minnesota state university mankato
minnesota state university moorhead
southwest minnesota state university
kenny wheeler
2mbs
winona state university
tony oxley
induction heating
3728 iras
asian highway
lamar university
3587 descartes
getter
m.i.m.e.o.
acura vigor
voltage regulator
university of minnesota morris
texas state university system
3582 cyrano
lubor kresk
william melton
mercedes 190 class
maureen castaneda
god in three persons
posterior column medial lemniscus pathway
sherron watkins
zdenka vvrov
neihu
emil hirsch
emo violence
sidi bel abbes
warblog
pompton river
asiatic society of japan
blossom (disambiguation)