If you’re still looking for the evidence
that likely 2014 gubernatorial candidate Gina
Raimondo is a progressive Democrat, as she told many a union
member during her push for pension reform last year, you won’t find it in local
tax policy. Instead of advocating for more revenue, Treasurer Raimondo decided
to again side with business interests and the right in calling tax equity
measures the enemy of economic growth.
“Given
Earlier this month, when I first asked
Raimondo about the Miller-Cimini income tax bills, that would repeal the flat
income tax and raise back the rates on Rhode Island’s richest residents to the
where they were lowered from starting in 2007, she said she hadn’t heard of the
effort – even though it had been covered by this news outlet, as well as the
Providence Journal, WPRI and RI Public Radio, among others.
In her statement that her deputy chief of
staff Joy Fox gave me more recently, Raimondo said: “Representative Cimini and
Senator Miller should be commended for reminding all Rhode Islanders about the
increasing levels of income inequality across our state, and by extension our
country. I look forward to working with Representative Cimini and Senator
Miller to actively pursue economic development policies and opportunities that
improve our state for everyone.”
When asked about Raimondo’s position on the
tax equity bills, George Nee ,
president of the local AFL-CIO, who has been helping to lead the charge for the
bills passage, said, “I don’t know if I’m surprised but I’m certainly
disappointed. I still don’t see the connection between jobs and taxes.”
Nee, and other supporters of the tax equity
bills, have pointed to the fact that unemployment in Rhode Island has gone up as income tax rates
for the affluent have gone down. The AFL-CIO also released poll results last
week done by Flemming and Associates that indicates 68 percent of Rhode
Islanders support the bills, which would raise the income tax rate on those who
make more than $250,000 but subsequently lower it when the unemployment rate
drops.
“We will continue to provide her with
information to try to change her mind,” Nee said. “I was hoping she would see
this as a necessary change in policy on both a state and federal level.”