Hillary
in Drag?
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
DIGG THIS
If you’d
like to know what the first months of a Hillary Clinton administration
would be like, just recall the first days of the Bill Clinton administration
– or observe the antics of one of Hillary’s most slavish political
supporters, Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley (dubbed "The
Teflon Leprechan" by WBAL Radio talk show host Ron Smith).
In the
first several months of the Bill Clinton regime barely a day went
by when the newspapers were not filled with proposals for new taxes
of all kinds. Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich was in such a
frenzy to raise taxes on everyone and everything that columnist
George Will felt compelled to treat him like an out-of-control,
hyperactive child in one of his Washington Post columns,
advising him to "Calm down, Mr. Secretary, calm down."
At the time
I began clipping all the "let’s raise taxes" headlines
and taping them to my office door. Within a couple of weeks my entire
door was completely covered with "Clinton calls for higher
gas taxes." "Clinton Calls for New Payroll Taxes."
"Clinton Calls for Higher Income Taxes." "Social
Security Tax Will Have to be Raised." "Clinton Apologizes
for No Middle Class Tax Cut, as Promised." And on and on.
Which brings
us to the Teflon Leprechan, Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley.
He was one of the first – possibly the very first – governor to
endorse Hillary for president, and has been making speeches around
the country on her behalf for months. He is clearly a Bill (and/or
Hillary) Clinton wannabe. He is sometimes slick like Bill – staging
photo ops on a daily basis, always talking out of both sides of
his mouth, constantly "flip-flopping." He even plays in
a band. And he is sometimes the Leftist ideologue like Hillary,
preaching class warfare with the best of them. He’s the worst of
both Clintons, in other words. As a politician he is apparently
so obnoxious that after just one meeting with him the Washington
Post endorsed his Republican opponent, the incumbent Governor
Robert Ehrlich, in the 2006 election. I have been reading the Post
for twenty-six years and I cannot recall the paper ever before
endorsing a Maryland or Virginia Republican for any of the top state
offices.
The first several
months of the O’Malley administration have been déjà
vu all over again, as Yogi Berra would say, with regard to the Clintonesque
tax-raising frenzy that has come out of the governor’s office. Not
that O’Malley’s predecessor, Robert Ehrlich, was a tax cutter. One
of the first things he did upon assuming office was to raise the
state’s real estate tax rate in 2003. The real estate boom, and
the strong Maryland economy fueled by the enormous growth of the
federal government during the Bush regime, allowed the first Maryland
Republican administration in some thirty-five years to increase
spending as much as any Democratic administration in memory had
done.
According to
a 2006 National Taxpayers’ Union study, state spending in Maryland
grew by 8.2% per year, on average, from 1993 to 2003, easily twice
the rate of personal income growth in the state. In his last year
in office (2006), Governor Ehrlich submitted a $30 billion budget
that was a 12% increase over the previous year, the biggest one-year
increase in a quarter of a century. Marylanders are so overtaxed
that Ehrlich left office with a budget surplus in excess of $1 billion.
But that was
not nearly enough for the Teflon Leprechan, whose inaugural address
was filled with 1930s-era class warfare talk about the undeserving
rich in the state, the haves and have-nots, the evils of corporations,
bla, bla, bla. And all of a sudden, out of the blue, the state bureaucracy
announced that, lo and behold, they are "projecting" a
$1.7 billion budget deficit. "Huh? Where did that
come from?", was the initial response of almost everyone.
It came from
"projected" massive spending increases on the black hole
of government-run school monopolies, which is essentially a giant
payoff to the teachers’ unions that were instrumental in getting
O’Malley elected and has nothing to do with "education"
per se. Like all other states, the more Maryland spends on its rotten
government schools, the worse they get in terms of student
performance.
So in order
to pay off his campaign debts with taxpayers’ money, O’Malley has
proposed a surge of tax increases. His major objective, besides
raising money, seems to be to incite envy and class warfare. With
stern talk about the "unfairness" of "the rich"
residing in the state, he has proposed increasing the state income
tax rate from a flat 4.75% to 6% for families with incomes over
around $200,000 per year and 6.5% for those with incomes above $500,000.
In Maryland there is a state income tax and a local "piggyback"
tax (isn’t that a cute and cuddly name for a tax?). The latter averages
about 2.5%, which means that, for the families or small business
owners with $200,000 in income, their tax rate will be 8.5%, much
higher than in any of the surrounding states.
The people
who drive Maryland’s private economy will be able to give themselves
an immediate 8.5% annual pay raise by simply moving to one
of the zero income tax states like Florida or Tennessee. Maryland
employers will also be put at more of a competitive disadvantage
in hiring if they recruit nationwide for their top employees and
are forced to pay higher wages to compensate for the state’s already
uncompetitive income tax rates. O’Malley doesn’t care at all about
this, for he obviously views this job as a mere stepping-stone to
national politics.
Like Bill Clinton,
O’Malley has promised a "middle class tax cut" as well,
in the form of a miniscule $90 per year cut in state income taxes
for those making around $75,000 a year. It’s a good bet that he
will also follow Clinton’s example in announcing, several months
from now, that he has "worked as hard as I have ever worked
in my life" and has been unable to find a way to come through
with this miniscule tax cut. So far, he has not yet mastered the
Clintonian art of lower-lip biting, but rumor has it that he’s working
on it.
The Teflon
Leprechan has also proposed cutting the state-administered property
tax by a few pennies per thousand dollars of assessed valuation,
but this too is a mirage. He will either renege on his promise,
or the state tax assessors will see to it that property reassessments
guarantee that there will never be any actual reduction in the amount
of property taxes that are paid. Promising property tax rate
cuts while increasing property assessments is the oldest
trick in the state and local politicians’ book.
The Leprechan
also wants to raise the state sales tax by 20%, to 6%, while "broadening
the base," which is political lingo for taxing lawyers, doctors,
dentists, and other service providers who are not now subject to
sales taxation. There is no state sales tax in neighboring Delaware,
so this will be great for all the outlet malls that dot that state.
The state gasoline tax will be raised, along with the automobile
titling tax (which is another 6% or so on car sales); O’Malley wants
to expand excise taxation and fees in as many industries as he can
get away with; and, of course, the "closing of tax loopholes"
is also a top priority.
With regard
to the latter topic, O’Malley staged a photo op recently on the
roof of a downtown Baltimore restaurant, where he could point to
a corporate headquarters building that was recently sold and was
exempted from the state’s "transfer tax," a special tax
of 2% on all real estate transfers. It’s "unfair," the
governor whined, that the people living in a $200,000 home in the
city (a slum apartment by Baltimore’s standards) will pay a $4000
transfer tax on the sale of their home, but the corporation will
pay nothing on the sale of its building.
Of course,
the easy way to "increase fairness" would be to eliminate
the "transfer tax" for the homeowners, not to extend it
to others. It is nothing but a Mafia-style shakedown "tax"
anyway. As the "don" said to a young Vito Corleone in
Godfather II as he tried to extort a weekly "tribute"
from Vito in return for allowing him to "do business"
in "his" neighborhood: "I only want a taste."
The Maryland "transfer tax" is a means by which the governor
of Maryland tells buyers and sellers of real estate, "If you
wanna do business in my state, you gotta give me a taste."
Several years
ago Maryland raised the tax on cigarettes by $1 per pack and created
a smuggling epidemic, since Virginia’s cigarette tax at the time
was about 3 cents per pack. There was so much smuggling of cigarettes,
driven by the arbitrage opportunity created by Maryland’s tax increase,
that the state employed literally thousands of "cigarette tax
police" to try to stop it. Former state comptroller Donald
Schaeffer even claimed that terrorists were in on it and sending
their ill-gotten gains back to their terrorist brethren in the Middle
East. O’Malley has proposed another $1 per pack tax increase on
cigarettes, a tax that would be borne mostly by lower-income Marylanders.
The
latest O’Malley tax-increasing proposal as of this writing (there
is bound to be another one tomorrow) is to establish a state government
slot machine monopoly. When Governor Ehrlich advocated legalizing
slot machines at Pimlico Racetrack and elsewhere, then Baltimore
Mayor O’Malley denounced the idea as an "immoral" way
of raising revenue. Now that he’s safely ensconced in the governor’s
mansion it’s all perfectly kosher. If he is successful, slot machine
revenue will fuel the creation of even more government bureaucracies,
which will become deficit-ridden like all the rest when the next
economic slowdown occurs, which will lead to calls for even further
tax increases, and the cycle will start all over.
There
has been no talk at all from O’Malley about allowing spending to
merely continue growing at 8% or so (double the personal income
growth rate), based on the existing tax system and a growing state
economy. Such a proposal – of allowing 8% spending growth, as opposed
to "projected" growth of say, 15%, would constitute a
7% "budget cut" and that would be "unfair" to
the teachers unions, state bureaucrats, and corporate and individual
welfare bums that constitute the backbone of the Democratic Party
in Maryland and in every other state.
September
29, 2007
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the
author of The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War,
(Three Rivers Press/Random House). His
latest book is Lincoln
Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe
(Crown Forum/Random House).
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at LRC
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