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Flip-flop alert: Blackwell NOW supports CAT taxes
Tuesday, May 16, 2006
FLIP FLOP ALERT!
WILL HE TEL THE TRUTH!
BLACKWELL'S REALITY
FLIP-FLOPS ON TAXES ONCE AGAIN
FIRST THE TEL, NOW THE CAT TAX
COLUMBUS -- For the second time in a week, Politician Ken Blackwell has flip-flopped on a major campaign policy position.
"Mr. Blackwell has flip-flopped more policy position than a cat has lives," said Brian Rothenberg, Communications Director of the Ohio Democratic Party. "It is an issue of trust. Flip-flopping off the TEL and now the CAT tax -- regardless where you stand on the issue -- makes you wonder just what kind of leadership he offers. Can you believe what he says today when he flip-flops tomorrow."
Blackwell told the Plain Dealer that he now supports the CAT tax after stating in January "that CAT must go."
-30-
That was then, this is
now
Last January, when seeking
his party's nomination for governor, Secretary
of State Ken Blackwell advocated elimination of
Ohio's new commercial activity
tax.
"What would make someone create a
new tax on commercial activity when we need
more commercial activity?" he asked during a
rally at Lima's Veterans Memorial Civic Center.
"That CAT must go."
But on Tuesday, just
weeks after securing his party's nomination,
Blackwell showed no signs of wanting to kill
the CAT.
"My general opinion is ... I
would go back 36 years and not have an income
tax, but that's not going to fly anywhere
either," he said. "The reality is, there have
been - and we're not going to get into the
particulars now - remember that I have a pretty
aggressive program for the personal income tax
and the death tax and if in fact you continue
to - as the state has started - to bring down
the income tax, we've actually cut our capital
gains taxes because we've lowered the top
marginal rate of the income tax."
But
what about the CAT?
Describing the
question as an effort to "tweak" him, Blackwell
said fellow Republicans who run the General
Assembly told him months ago that the CAT must
stay. The new tax is allowing Ohio to phase out
two unpopular business taxes that are often
cited as harmful to economic
development.
"I basically have said here
is an area where I've faced reality," he
said.
Blackwell said he continues to
support efforts to make permanent a ban on
applying the CAT to gasoline and anything
related to energy.
--Sandy Theis, the
Plain Dealer
