Did PA Really Need Higher Taxes?

Yesterday, blogger for the Time Herald/State Senator Daylin Leach attacked ATR’s no-tax pledge and Sen. Orie for signing it a few years ago before voting to increase taxes as part of this budget. (HT GrassrootsPA).

Americans for Tax Reform offered a response, noting among other things, the lack of state spending transparency – which along with the Taxpayer Protection Pledge, is one of their major initiatives.

Leach then offered a rebuttal on taxes and spending, which I have three items to take issue with.

First, Leach claims that

[H]e [ATR’s Patrick Gleason] claims that there are “barriers” to knowing this information, which is my point exactly.

Uh, no. Gleason was referring to obstacles to getting information about where Pennsylvania tax dollars are spent. That is not Leach’s “point exactly”, or even tangentially. He says nothing about state spending transparency.

Second, Leach cites a poll which

[F]ound that a strong majority of Pennsylvanians support paying more taxes to avoid cuts in education and health care.

I’ve already written about this – but that poll also found voters preferred laying off state employees and cutting services to higher taxes. And the question he likes was a false one – none of the proposed budgets would have resulted in cuts for education or health care.

Finally, Leach pulls a “Washington Monument” ploy, writing

Similarly, while the government must, and should, and did make cuts, there are certain core functions like say…feeding the kids, that it must avoid cutting for the good of society.

Leach acts as though the budget debate in Pennsylvania was whether to raise taxes or starve children.

In reality, the state budget preserved hundreds of millions of dollars for corporate welfare, millions more for the Pittsburgh Penguins arena, million dollar marketing deals, fraud (and outright theft) in welfare, per-diems for lawmakers, funding for ACORN, and a multitude of other spending initiatives someone less critical than feeding kids.