Tax Reform ATR believes that all consumed income should be taxed one time, at one low and flat rate. Link
RT @BrianHDarling: Take Tax Increases off the table! @taxreformer (ATR) and @JimPethokoukis cited - http://t.co/fQqY6SBB
BrianHDarling
ATR Releases 2012 List of State Taxpayer Protection Pledge Signers for June 5 Primaries http://t.co/npac8I9I
taxreformer
Abel Maldonado Voted For Largest State Tax Increase in U.S. History http://t.co/BTD5jY0B
taxreformer
UN Tax Bureaucrats Coming to a Town Near You http://t.co/oiFk3M2n
taxreformer
CoGC: Nanny Bloomberg Strikes Again with Big Gulp Crackdown http://t.co/wyJRr2QD
taxreformer
Obama’s HHS Wants You to Support Obamacare, Especially if You’re Not White. http://t.co/clexOjh2
taxreformer
CoGC: Vote Alert: ATR and COGC Urge the House to Vote YES on the Blackburn Amendment Across-the-Board Cut http://t.co/ogXZGpVr
taxreformer
CoGC: Vote Alert: ATR and COGC Urge the House to Vote YES on the Blackburn Amendment http://t.co/bT1Be8V5
taxreformer
CoGC: Video Alert: ED Mattie Duppler Appears on Lou Dobbs with a Warning about the Coming Taxmageddon http://t.co/G74xHgtb
taxreformer
Bob Turner Needs a History Lesson in “Grand Compromises” http://t.co/U6WJ3AMe
taxreformer
Dear Senators Reid & McConnell:
On behalf of Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) and millions of taxpaying Americans nation-wide, I urge you to oppose Senator Jeff Bingaman’s (D-N.M) newly proposed energy plan, the American Clean Energy Leadership Act, which forces states to comply with a Renewable Energy Standards (RES) and penalizes those that cannot.
Sen. Bingaman’s proposal defines what percentage of states energy must be derived from “carbon-free renewable” energy, presuming that all states have equal renewable resources and that all states currently produce the same amount of renewable energy. Neither of which is true. Further, this bill directs how states define renewable energy.
This broad sweeping bill shows a shocking ignorance to the varying circumstances experienced from state to state. Certainly Alabama and Alaska do not have the same access to water, sun, or wind, the differences only amplify when comparing all fifty states. For distant Washington bureaucrats to shove RES legislation upon the states effectively attempts to compare apples to oranges.
In what seems to be an attempt to keep the playing field slanted, Bingaman’s bill does not allow nuclear energy to be counted as “carbon-free renewable” energy, despite it being the only source that can be created in all 50 states.
A reasonable change to this proposal would allow states to opt-in or out of recommended federal renewable standards, and allow states to define what renewable energy is on their own terms.
Currently, thirteen states and the District of Columbia produce less than one percent of their energy from what this bill defines as renewable sources. Further, only sixteen states produce between one and three percent. It is unreasonable to apply universal regulations to all every state, especially given the disparity amongst them.
If states are not allowed to define their own rules, they will be unable to comply with universal RES imposed by Washington, forcing them to fine electric companies. Electric companies will inevitably pass these increased charges to consumers, resulting in an energy tax. I urge all Senators to oppose even considering this measure.
Onward,
Grover G. Norquist
cc: All Members of the U.S. Senate