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CHICAGO – In the year since
Illinois enacted record tax increases, the state's unemployment numbers have
worsened, businesses have fled the state and the backlog of bills remains in
the billions. Each of these and other economic indicators point to a conclusion
at which most of the public has already arrived: the January 2011 tax hikes
failed to fix Illinois, and it’s time for repeal.
“A year ago, a policy choice was made to implement a $7 billion tax hike with
the promise that it would help solve Illinois' fiscal problems," said John Tillman, CEO of the Illinois Policy
Institute. "The tax hike was a failure and the people of Illinois know
it. Illinois is not creating enough jobs, and the state budget is still a mess
– as evidenced by the recent downgrade from Moody's. It's time to repeal the
tax hike and hold accountable the politicians who enacted the tax increase."
Senate Republican Leader Christine
Radogno and House Republican Leader
Tom Cross, who opposed the tax increases, joined Tillman at a Thursday
press conference in Chicago. They noted that the failure to enact sound fiscal
policy is costing Illinois jobs and families – the very families who are now
paying an average of $1,000 more a year in Illinois taxes.
Standing next to $1,000 worth of canned goods, diapers, infant formula,
household supplies and groceries that could feed an Illinois family for weeks,
Radogno said: “Over the vocal objections of Republicans in both chambers, they
passed a tax increase that took one week’s pay out of the pockets of Illinois
residents. That $1,000 is money that working families no longer have to spend
on groceries, gas, clothes and a roof over their heads. Yet the monumental
problems of state government remain.”
Cross added: “The majority party made many promises that its giant tax increase
would solve the state's budget problems. That has not been the case. As we said
a year ago, and we continue to say now, we must structurally change the way we
do business in Illinois with strong public employee pension reform and Medicaid
reforms that stabilize our budget and help create a better jobs climate.”
The poll commissioned by the Institute shows public opposition to tax increases
is strong. Sixty-eight percent of likely voters oppose the tax increase, while only
5 percent of likely voters are “very confident” the revenue from the tax hike
was used responsibly by state government. The poll also showed strong public
support for the immediate repeal or scheduled expiration of the tax hike.
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