U.S. Kansas Tax Cut Experiment Comes To An End As Lawmakers Vote To Raise Taxes

With a warm climate and plenty of rural landscapes, California also has the highest rate of homeless people living in unsheltered accommodation, at an alarming 86.6%
 
With a warm climate and plenty of rural landscapes, California also has the highest rate of homeless people living in unsheltered accommodation, at an alarming 86.6%

Other states have warm climates Desh yet don't have our poverty levels. Why do you think that is?
 
With a warm climate and plenty of rural landscapes, California also has the highest rate of homeless people living in unsheltered accommodation, at an alarming 86.6%

I don't think you even understand what your quote is referencing so no wonder you can't address why we have the highest poverty rate
 
I don't think you even understand what your quote is referencing so no wonder you can't address why we have the highest poverty rate



With a warm climate and plenty of rural landscapes, California also has the highest rate of homeless people


go head and lie about this study that backs just what I said


you are evil and stupid

go lick Putins toilet for your next talking point traitor
 

June 7, 201710:37 AM ET

Celia Llopis-Jepsen


Kansas lawmakers have voted to roll back a series of major tax cuts that became an example for conservative lawmakers around the country but didn't deliver the growth and prosperity promised by Gov. Sam Brownback, a Republican.
A coalition of conservative Republicans, some of whom voted for sweeping tax cuts in 2012 or defended them in the years since, sided with moderates and Democrats to override Brownback's veto of a $1.2 billion tax increase.


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The law to increase taxes over the next two years comes as legislators seek to close a projected $900 million budget gap for that same period and bolster funding for K-12 schools under a Kansas Supreme Court order.

"It's a huge vote," said state Rep. Steven Johnson, a Republican and chairman of the House tax panel, adding that legislative leadership had explored many routes to find a tax solution that would gain sufficient support in both chambers. "It's a huge vote for looking for an option for Kansas among limited options."

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Floor debates on taxes ran late into Tuesday evening, but in the end, 27 senators and 88 representatives rendered Brownback's veto — which had been handed down just hours earlier — irrelevant.

Passage of the tax bill brings to an end signature tax policies of the Brownback administration. Most of those policies were part of a 2012 law that exempted owners of more than 300,000 small businesses and became a political flashpoint in recent elections.

With a tax plan complete and new school finance formula sent to the governor, the Legislature still must agree on the state budget.

It was the second time this session the governor sought to block legislation that would unravel 2012 tax changes and raise revenue through a three-bracket income tax structure. The first time, in February, lawmakers fell three votes short in the Senate of pushing past his opposition.

The veto nearly survived this time, too: Though the House exceeded the override threshold by four votes, the Senate results came in at exactly the minimum needed.

State Rep. Barbara Ballard, a Lawrence Democrat, described feeling tremendous relief, and said she believes many Kansans will share that sensation.

"Now we have a source of money. Then we can work our way out of the hole that we're in," she said. "It's almost like you can breathe."

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Mopping it up

Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning said lawmakers had known since May 2014 that the tax cuts were leading to fiscal woes and not playing out as intended. He said while he voted for the 2012 changes, he believes in cleaning up one's messes in life and planned to cast his vote accordingly.

"I'm going to mop it up," he said.

Conservative Republican state Sen. Dennis Pyle drew on the nursery rhyme Humpty Dumpty in his appeal that colleagues uphold the veto. He suggested some lawmakers might think Brownback is like the main character in that poem, but it is in fact the spend-happy legislators who are shattered.

"They continue to want more and more," he said. "They want to interfere in people's lives."

The tax plan sets three income tax tiers: 3.1 percent, 5.25 percent and 5.7 percent. Kansas currently has two rates, 2.6 percent and 4.6 percent, for tax year 2018.

Much of the impassioned debate in the Senate came from conservative opponents of the bill, while many moderate Republicans and Democrats sat silent. Those who rose to comment rejected conservatives' claims that increasing taxes defies common sense.

"From our side of the aisle, that tax plan didn't receive a single vote," Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley said of the 2012 cuts, adding that Democrats had foreseen repercussions for the state's financial health.

State Sen. Tom Holland, a Democrat, said Kansas had been riding "the crazy train" and was long overdue for a solution.

failure
 
With a warm climate and plenty of rural landscapes, California also has the highest rate of homeless people


go head and lie about this study that backs just what I said


you are evil and stupid

go lick Putins toilet for your next talking point traitor

No Desh. You are either lying or don't understand what you posted. It doesn't say we have the highest homeless population. It says of our homeless population we have the highest who live on the streets (outdoors)
 
No Desh. You are either lying or don't understand what you posted. It doesn't say we have the highest homeless population. It says of our homeless population we have the highest who live on the streets (outdoors)

eat shit you evil divertabot



your ideas have failed and failed


Ours have worked



you seek chaos


we seek solutions
 
So you don't understand what you posted and you cuss at me for it. You want solutions yet can't say why we have the highest poverty rate? How do you find a solution when you can't state the problem?
 
You're just screaming unfounded generalizations. A tax cut for those earning $100k/year and less, will jump start the economy. Our inept Congress won't grant tax cuts for those who drive the economy, without a corresponding 1000x cut for the wealthy.

Every Republican tax cut has been done in connection with increased spending. It has never ended well.

Dear liar; ALL previous tax cuts were driven towards the middle class.

Lesson for lying liberals: if you give an across the board tax cut to EVERYONE of 10%; those making 1,000,000 will receive a larger benefit than those making 100,000 because......wait for it.....THEY PAY THE HIGHEST AMOUNT AND MAKE MORE.

Good lord; we need a math class for liberal liars so that they can become partially informed.
 
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