Who
Won the Last Presidential Debate?
The Hardworking Taxpayers of America
WASHINGTON- Last night, Gov. George W. Bush (R-Tex.) and Vice President Al Gore (D)
had their final debate. While
the debate itself was widely judged to be a draw for the candidates,
the taxpayers of America came out the big winners.
Damon
Ansell, vice president of policy at Americans for Tax Reform, issued
the following statement on the debate:
"Last
night Gov. Bush and Vice President Gore clarified their differences
on taxes. Gore will
target his modest tax cuts toward certain groups of people, while
Bush will cut income taxes responsibly across the board for all
taxpayers.
"Mr.
Gore repeatedly attacked the details of Gov. Bush's plan.
Gore alleged 'if everyone here in this audience was dead
on in the middle of the middle class, then the tax cuts for every
single one of you, all added up, would be less than the tax cut
his plan would give to just one member of that top, wealthiest one
percent.'
"In
fact, that was not true. Using
figures obtained from the U.S Census Bureau on the non-partisan
TaxClarity.com Bush tax plan calculator demonstrates that Gore's
allegation was way off the mark, yet again.
"In
addition, under the Bush plan, one in five taxpaying families with
children will no longer pay any federal income tax at all. That's six million families.
Gore's plan offers no such break to low-income families and
keeps those families on the tax rolls.
"Lastly,
under the Clinton-Gore administration, the wealthy have paid 62
percent of the tax burden.
Under Bush's plan, the wealthy will pay 64 percent of the
tax burden. In addition,
the wealthy will pay one-third of the taxes and receive just one-fifth
of the benefits. These
two facts discredit Gore's disingenuous allegation that Bush's plan
helps the wealthy.
"The
tax issue could not be more clear for taxpayers: elect Al Gore and have the government keep more of your money
or elect George W. Bush and get meaningful, responsible tax relief.