Tax Reform ATR believes that all consumed income should be taxed one time, at one low and flat rate. Link
The Internet Sales Tax Vote Breakdown: A Republican Generation Gap: http://t.co/7GpRtPZGuh #NoNetTax
taxreformer
We're just beginning to scratch the surface on this IRS thing, folks. I'm talking more about it w/ @GerriWillisFBN tonight, 6pm^ET
MDuppler
Surprise: #Obamacare Leading to Higher Health Costs: http://t.co/J6dfnKqFYZ
taxreformer
In light of the developing IRS scandal, ATR’s @RyanLEllis asks, “Are these the people you want doing your taxes?”: http://t.co/oKvpIofu7Y
taxreformer
New @Mercatus video breaks down what’s at stake for states considering expanding Medicaid under #Obamacare: http://t.co/9TH9ftOBPF
taxreformer
List of Upcoming Obamacare Tax Hikes http://t.co/yEdM94o6lw
taxreformer
ATR’s @MDuppler discusses the ramifications of the developing IRS scandal on @VarneyCo: http://t.co/ZvMvMW9fRE
taxreformer
In new @DailyCaller op-ed, @GroverNorquist urges Congress to question IRS agents involved in this scandal: http://t.co/M0gV2GpQ9G
taxreformer
Gov. Bob McDonnell Signs Largest Tax Hike in Virginia History into Law: http://t.co/iENksi7uQi
taxreformer
IRS tax return preparation invites a conflict of interest: http://t.co/oKvpIofu7Y
taxreformer
The House Budget Committee this morning released a ten-year balanced budget plan that does not raise net taxes. The blueprint will bring the federal budget into balance by the end of the decade by capping discretionary spending, reforming entitlements and getting the nation’s debt under control.
Spending Restraint
The House GOP budget is the only blueprint offered by leaders in Washington that balances – and it does so by the end of the ten year budget window and without raising taxes. Families and employers balance their budgets every day; the plan put forward today by the House Budget Committee shows it is time for lawmakers to do the same.
Mandatory Reforms
Tax Reform without Raising Taxes
On the revenue side, the House GOP budget calls for no net tax increase. The current law revenue baseline (19 percent of GDP as a durable revenue target) is adopted, meaning the government will have to live within its means. Taxpayers already send far too much of their income (higher than the historical average) to Washington, and should not be asked to write an even bigger check to the IRS. The fiscal cliff already raised taxes by $600 billion. $1 trillion of Obamacare taxes came online with the fiscal cliff. Taxpayers are doing their part, and then some. It's time for the big spenders to start doing theirs.
The budget also makes sure that the government's tax take is less destructive to jobs and economic growth. It works in tandem with House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp's (R-Mich.) ongoing comprehensive tax reform efforts. To this end, the budget gives the broad outlines of a far simpler and easier to comply with tax system which:
Most importantly, this budget envisions tax reform taking place within the fixed tax revenue target of current law. "Tax reform" would not become a code word for "tax hikes," as too often happens in Washington. Tax reform is not about bringing in more tax revenue to the government. It's about bringing in the same amount of revenue more intelligently, with lower tax rates and a tax base which subjects all consumed income to taxation once and only once.
Obamacare Repeal
The FY 2014 budget repeals Obamacare. This common sense idea saves $1.8 trillion in spending on a program the American people never asked for and don't want. Implicitly, the budget also repeals the $1 trillion in new Obamacare tax increases by re-purposing that money within comprehensive, revenue-neutral tax reform. Obamacare is replaced by consensus-driven reforms to healthcare like ending the tax bias in favor of employer-provided health insurance, moving toward a consumer driven healthcare model where patients--not insurance companies or government bureaucrats--are put in charge of their medical decisions, and medical liability reform.
To follow Ryan Ellis's RSS feed click here. To follow them on Twitter, their handle is @ryanlellis
To follow Mattie Duppler's RSS feed click here. To follow them on Twitter, their handle is @MDuppler