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PRESS RELEASE FROM AMERICANS FOR TAX REFORM
Contact: John Kartch (
jkartch@atr.org or 202-785-0266)
Click here
for a copy of this file in Adobe Acrobat
10/27/03
Taxpayers
to Senator Cantwell: Pass Internet Tax Moratorium
Taxpayer group blasts Senator's hold on legislation that
permanently extends Internet access tax moratorium.
WASHINGTON
- Efforts to make pass S. 150, the Internet Tax Non-Discrimination
Act, came to an abrupt halt this week when Senator Marie Cantwell
(D-WA) placed a legislative "hold" on the bill preventing
it from coming to the Senate floor for a vote. Americans for
Tax Reform (ATR), the Nation's leading taxpayer advocacy organization,
strongly opposes any and all efforts to raise taxes and believes
that Senator Cantwell's hold on S. 150 represents a de facto
tax increase on the American people who log on the Internet.
"Clearly
Senator Cantwell is more concerned about protecting tax collectors
instead of taxpayers," said Grover Norquist, President
of ATR. "By placing a hold on S. 150, the Senator
from Washington is supporting taxes on Internet access and
e-mail, as well as double-taxation of a product or service
bought over the Internet."
Senator Cantwell
is holding up the bill to ensure that Washington State can
tax Internet access by imposing a "gross receipts"
tax on the nation's Internet access providers when they provide
Internet access to Washington consumers. Although the generally
applicable gross receipts tax rate in Washington State is
.471%, the tax rate for Internet access service is 1.5%. This
means that Internet access in Washington State already faces
an extra 1% tax burden, and that tax burden is paid by Internet
users in the form of higher prices.
"Senator
Cantwell is telling Washingtonians they need higher tax burdens
on their Internet access," said Norquist. "Whether
it's paid by them or by their Internet Service Providers through
a gross receipts tax, Internet users in Washington State will
pay the bill."
In 1998, and more
recently in 2001, Congress acted to put an end to taxes that
unfairly single out the Internet or that tax Internet access.
That moratorium sunsets on November 1, 2003. If Congress does
not extend the ban, American consumers will face a de facto
tax increase at a time when they are least able to pay it
and at a time when each state is competing to get more citizens
logged on the Internet. Not only that, this tax will hit schools,
libraries, hospitals and families - those who use the Internet
for research, education, and, most critically, communication.
Because the current
moratorium is scheduled to expire on November 1, 2003, Congress
must act quickly to permanently ban Internet taxes that are
complicated, unfair, and an immense burden on the economy.
Both the Senate Commerce and Finance Committees have cleared
the Internet Tax Non-Discrimination Act, and now Senator Cantwell's
legislative hold is preventing the Senate from quickly scheduling
a vote on this important legislation.
###
Americans for Tax Reform is a non-partisan
coalition of taxpayers and taxpayer groups who oppose any and all federal
and state tax increases. For
more information, or to arrange an interview with Mr. Norquist please contact John Kartch at (202)785-0266 or by email at
jkartch@atr.org.
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