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The Newsroom - 2010 |
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Sandoval lays
claim to anti-tax allegiance
 
April 06, 2010 -
Carson City —
Republican gubernatorial candidate Brian Sandoval has flirted with the role and
hinted at it. Now, he has made it official: He will seek to be the most fiscally
conservative candidate for governor.

Sandoval declared as much in a radio interview with first lady Dawn Gibbons,
whose husband, Gov. Jim Gibbons, Sandoval is trying to unseat.

Dawn Gibbons: “Is there any situation in which you would consider raising
taxes?”

Sandoval: “No.”

And that’s that.

When asked Monday for more detail from Sandoval — who many thought was the most
centrist in the Republican field and thus better positioned to defeat the
Democrats’ nominee — his campaign said he was unavailable. A written statement
from the candidate said: “I do not believe in raising taxes.”

Former North Las Vegas Mayor Mike Montandon and a spokesman for Gibbons rushed
to confirm that they too would have offered the same answer — there is no
circumstance imaginable under which they would consider raising taxes.

That GOP candidates are trying to flash conservative credentials is not
unexpected. With the conservative Tea Party movement in full throttle and more
conservative voters making up the base in a typical Republican primary, it’s not
too difficult for a candidate to read the tea leaves.

But in staking out such black-and-white positions, Republicans are almost
begging for accusations of hypocrisy down the road — when merely cutting state
spending will become more difficult, according to experts — if they err in the
eyes of the anti-tax watchdogs.

Consider Gibbons, who ran on a promise not to raise taxes and even put it in
writing when he signed a pledge in 2006. Since then, the governor has been
accused numerous times of violating his vow — including counting a
voter-approved tax increase in his budget and supporting fee increases, even
when the industries agreed to them.

Sandoval said in his Monday statement that Gibbons raised $50 million in fees
during the past special session, the “liberal approach” to balancing the budget.

The next governor will find keeping a promise not to raise taxes difficult, if
not impossible, according to some experts.

When the Legislature convenes in 2011 to pass the state’s next budget, Nevada
will face a deficit estimated at between

$2.5 billion and $3 billion in a $6.5 billion two-year budget. Those who have
studied the state’s finances say it will be almost impossible to balance that
budget without additional revenue.

“Based on the current economy, that would be a significant challenge,” said Mike
Hillerby, former Gov. Kenny Guinn’s chief of staff. “Can you physically do it on
paper? Yes. Can you balance it in a way without a federal judge taking over
significant portions of state government? That becomes interesting.”

Cutting spending by that amount would require significant cuts in services,
raising the possibility that interest groups would challenge the adequacy of
education, prison and health systems, said Hillerby, who supports Sandoval for
governor.

Jeremy Aguero, principal with financial firm Applied Analysis, said, “Having
reviewed the budget, I don’t know where you cut another $2.5 billion or $3
billion without taxes.”

Conservative lobbyist Paul Enos, CEO of the Nevada Motor Transport Association,
said the state still needs to look at cutting its spending and stop vilifying
the businesses that pay taxes. But, “We would need to cut a lot. I don’t know if
all those cuts are tenable. Last I heard, we could fund all of (K-12) education
and half of higher ed, and it will take up the entire state budget based on the
revenue we have right now. Absolutely there will be a tax increase in the
future.”

Mary-Sarah Kinner, a spokeswoman for Sandoval’s campaign, said the candidate is
talking with experts about what, beside taxes and cuts, can be done. She pointed
to his plan before the last session that involved selling or leasing back state
buildings to raise money, as well as cutting teacher and public employee pay and
raiding local government funds.

“Brian Sandoval is the only candidate for governor to offer a budget fix without
raising taxes,” she said, noting that Democratic gubernatorial candidate Rory
Reid refused to offer a short-term plan and Gibbons’ end game raised some fees.

Sandoval’s position comes as a surprise to many longtime watchers of state
politics, where Sandoval was an assemblyman and the attorney general before he
left for a lifetime appointment to the federal bench. During his time in Carson
City, he developed a reputation for building consensus with Democrats.

In an interview in September, Sandoval said that when he served in the
Legislature in the 1990s, he voted once to allow the Washoe County Commission to
raise the sales tax. He also said he voted to raise the property tax in Clark
County to build new schools.
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Brian Sandoval,
Gov. Jim Gibbons, Michael Montandon
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In 2003, as
attorney general, Sandoval filed a lawsuit and
personally delivered it to the Supreme Court to try and
compel the Legislature to balance the budget, and pass a
tax increase. (His campaign gave a transcript of
testimony in which Sandoval told the Assembly: “This
office is not going to opine on how you accomplish
balancing the budget, only that you must balance the
budget by July 1, 2003. How you get there is the
business of this body.”)

Sandoval’s campaign said despite his recent bold
statements, he will not sign the written “Taxpayer
Protection Pledge,” a litmus test for conservative anti-taxers
such as Chuck Muth, a Nevada political consultant.

“He prefers not to sign something that will tie his
hands behind his back,” Kinner said. “He does not
believe in raising taxes.”

Montandon last month signed the Taxpayer Protection
Pledge. He had resisted for months, he said: “I worried
about being put into a box. But it also holds you to a
standard. Spending is the problem, not the taxation
side.”

Dan Burns, Gibbons’ state spokesman, said the governor
also does not support raising taxes under any
circumstances. The $200 million room tax increase he
included in the 2009 budget was approved by voters in an
advisory question. “The governor has said all along that
he will not stand in the way of the people. This isn’t a
dictatorship. If people want something, they’re willing
to say ‘yes’ to some sort of tax hike like that, the
governor will not stand in the way.”

Gibbons cut a compromise deal in the 2010 special
session that included fee increases on mining claims and
foreclosures.

Each of the Republican candidates said he would equate
extending taxes that are scheduled to expire in 2011
with raising taxes.

Reid, the likely Democratic nominee, was unavailable for
comment, according to his campaign.

Reid spokesman Mike Trask would not directly answer
whether there were any situations in which Reid would
support a tax increase. He pointed out that the three
white papers Reid has released charting how he would
govern were all revenue neutral.

Reid has said that before the November election, he will
come out with a plan to balance the state’s budget. But
he wants to wait until after a legislative study
commission looks at Nevada’s tax structure and quality
of life issues.
« Go Back

Author: D. Schwartz, Las Vegas Sun
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