They can afford it and it's the right thing to do
Steve Ahlquist
As the Rhode Island House releases the
FY2027 state budget, the Revenue for
Rhode Islanders Coalition and more than 50 statewide organizations and
businesses1 are calling on legislative leaders to meet
this moment with courage and urgency by including meaningful revenue solutions
— including the top one percent surtax proposal — in the final budget. On
Thursday, they held a rally outside the Rhode Island State House and then went
inside to lobby in both chambers.
“We are here to demand that lawmakers tax the rich,” said
emcee Alisha Pina, director of Rhode Island Interfaith
Coalition to Reduce Poverty. “We are here today because we know Rhode
Island needs more revenue. We are here today because most of us are not
thriving; we are struggling paycheck to paycheck. We know that tax fairness and
more revenue from the 1% will bring in more money that we all need. Rhode
Island can take care of itself, and we do that by doing it together. We know
that federal cuts will be on the order of $400 million for fiscal year 2028, so
the money found a few weeks ago is not enough. What we need is tax fairness,
and tax fairness means taxing the top 1% to bring in more money for all of us
and to address the inequities we see every day in education, housing, and
healthcare.
“We need money for childcare, the unhoused, RIPTA, and
healthcare. Every session, we tell our legislators the same thing: It is your
moral obligation to help all of us, not just some of us. To think that the
budget that’s going to be announced tomorrow may not include any millionaires
or 1% tax ... It’s not fair, logical, or good for Rhode Island. We’re here to
demand what we need. Listen to your taxpayers. We’re the ones who elect you,
and yet you make decisions that are against what we want. That’s why we’re here
today.”
“In April 1978, martyr and Saint Óscar Romero wrote,
‘A church that doesn’t provoke any crisis, a gospel that doesn’t unsettle, a
word of God that doesn’t get under anyone’s skin, a word of God that doesn’t
touch the real sin of the society in which it is being proclaimed -- what
gospel is that?’2 The original column was written for an
archdiocesan newspaper in response to secular attacks from the Salvadorian
oligarchy, corrupt and fraudulent leadership supported by the U.S. government,”
said Jeremy Langill, Executive Minister of the Rhode Island
State Council of Churches. “Romero had been accused of being a communist,
but like many inspired by liberation theology and the reality that the gospels
compelled action, he continued to insist that his care and support for the
rights of the poor were a matter of faith.
“But Saint Romero is not the only leader who understood the
Christian call to action. Karl Barth, arguably
the most preeminent Protestant theologian of the 20th century, wrote that the
churches have injured the cause of the gospel by the way they have identified
the gospel with the badly planned and ineptly guided cause of the West. Bart,
too, was responding to claims that he was a crypto-communist because of his
consistent critique of the attempt to identify Christian faith post World War
II with the economic and political systems of the United States. His commentary
was theological. It was grounded in the gospel. It could not be assimilated
into market forces that prioritized profits over people.
“Friends, a marginal tax rate on the top 1% is, to speak
simply, a no-brainer. It’s a no-brainer because it does not even get close to
addressing the deep structural inequities that drive our dystopian and immoral
economic reality. It merely addresses a symptom, the excessive accumulation of
wealth by a handful of people. As a minister of the gospel of Christ, I already
know what Jesus thinks about wealth. The gospels go straight to the heart of
the matter: ‘The first shall be last, and the last shall be first.’ (Matthew
20:16) It is a teaching that comes just after the parable of the workers in the
vineyard, where the manager paid every employee equally, regardless of the
number of hours they worked.