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Governor Dayton Urges President, Republicans to Abandon Proposal that Would Eliminate Tax Deduction for 900,000 Minnesota Families

10/30/2017 12:21:40 PM

Tax proposal from President Trump, Congressional Republicans would eliminate tax deduction for one-third of Minnesota taxpayers, hurting residents in every county (as detailed below)
 
While 80 percent of the benefits would go to the top 1 percent, 900,000 Minnesota families would lose an average $12,000 tax deduction every year; totaling over $12 billion statewide
 
ST. PAUL, MN – Today, Governor Mark Dayton called on President Donald Trump and Republican members of Congress to abandon their tax proposal which would eliminate on an average a $12,000 tax deduction for 900,000 primarily middle-class Minnesota families. These tax deductions provide hard-working Minnesota families about $12 billion in tax benefits every year.
 
The following is a statement from Governor Mark Dayton:
 
“The US Congress’ Republican Senators and Representatives and President Trump are striking another blow against our country's future economic prosperity, by cutting taxes, especially for the rich, large corporations, and powerful special interests. Over half of their proposed tax cuts would go to the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans, whose annual incomes total more than $730,000 per year.

“They are trying to say, with straight faces, that their multi-trillion tax ‘reform’ will trigger so much new economic growth that it will largely pay for itself. That premise was shown to be pure fiction, after President Reagan cut taxes in 1981. He caused enormous increases in federal budget deficits, when the promised economic boom failed to appear.

“I was serving in the US Senate, when President George W. Bush perpetrated the same hoax with two enormous tax cuts in 2001 and 2003. President Bill Clinton had spent the previous eight years balancing the federal budget, and forecasts predicted annual surpluses for the next decade.

“President Bush’s huge tax giveaways did not prompt a surge in economic growth; in fact, they were followed shortly by a seismic economic collapse, ‘The Great Recession.’ Those forecasted federal budget surpluses were twisted into massive budget deficits. They have persisted, even during the modest economic growth of the past few years. Last year’s federal budget deficit was $666 billion.

“Those previous fiscal fiascoes should tell us that Congress’ present tax follies will make future deficits even worse and add to the federal government’s debt, which now exceeds $20 trillion. 

“Furthermore, their current tax bill is shamefully biased against lower and middle-class families. In fact, by 2027, the richest 1 percent of Americans would receive nearly 80 percent of the bill’s tax benefits, while lower- and middle-class taxpayers would receive 13 percent. 

“One of their most offensive proposals would eliminate the deductibility of Minnesota’s state income and sales taxes and local property taxes from our citizens’ federal tax liabilities. It would completely remove these important tax deductions, which total over $12.3 billion per year for 900,000 Minnesota families.

“Over one-third of Minnesotans claim those deductions, including 40 percent of the residents in the Third Congressional District, 39 percent in the Sixth Congressional District, and 43 percent in the Second Congressional District. Yet the three Congressmen, who represent those Districts, voted in favor of the House bill. (Note: 20 House Republicans voted against the bill, because eliminating the state and local tax deduction would have harmed so many of their constituents.) 

“I strongly urge President Trump and Republicans in Congress to abandon this and other extremely regressive tax proposals. Any so-called ‘tax reforms’ must do nothing to worsen our nation’s fiscal stability, and be focused on improving the lives and fortunes of low- and middle-income families – not a handful of the super-wealthy.”
 
Repealing the State and Local Tax Deduction, as proposed by President Trump and the Republican Congress, would disproportionately hurt Minnesotans, because Minnesota is one of the few states that receives less than its taxpayers contribute in federal tax dollars. For every dollar Minnesotans pay in federal taxes, Minnesota receives 90 cents in federal spending. If this tax State and Local Tax Deduction is repealed, Minnesotans would pay more in federal taxes, and have less to show for it.
 
Who Would Be Impacted: By County
The following county-by-county data shows how many Minnesota taxpayers would be impacted by President Trump’s proposal. This chart includes estimates of the average tax deduction Minnesotans would lose in each county, on average, if the State and Local Tax Deduction is repealed.
 

County

Number of Households Impacted

Average Tax Deduction Lost

Aitkin County

1,840

($7,395)

Anoka County

68, 460

($9,861)

Becker County

4,060

($9,751)

Beltrami County

4,380

($9,436)

Benton County

5,290

($8,533)

Big Stone County

470

($8,279)

Blue Earth County

8,160

($10,642)

Brown County

3,070

($9,389)

Carlton County

4,990

($8,570)

Carver County

23,460

($16,132)

Cass County

3,740

($9,268)

Chippewa County

1,200

($9,638)

Chisago County

10,930

($9,655)

Clay County

8,010

($9,044)

Clearwater County

930

($12,076)

Cook County

790

($8,446)

Cottonwood County

1,100

($10,161)

Crow Wing County

8,840

($9,503)

Dakota County

90,680

($11,932)

Dodge County

3,280

($8,671)

Douglas County

5,730

($11,168)

Faribault County

1,310

($8,424)

Fillmore County

2,420

($8,374)

Freeborn County

3,230

($10,072)

Goodhue County

7,840

($9,547)

Grant County

720

($9,685)

Hennepin County

247,660

($17,694)

Houston County

2,540

($10,126)

Hubbard County

2,550

($8,673)

Isanti County

6,650

($8,234)

Itasca County

5,530

($9,452)

Jackson County

1,010

($10,876)

Kanabec County

1,920

($8,034)

Kandiyohi County

5,920

($9,937)

Kittson County

390

($8,762)

Koochiching County

1,230

($8,401)

Lac qui Parle County

630

($9,494)

Lake County

1,340

($7,969)

Lake of the Woods County

340

($8,609)

Le Sueur County

4,680

($9,192)

Lincoln County

520

($7,708)

Lyon County

2,880

($10,426)

Mahnomen County

280

($6,939)

Marshall County

870

($8,976)

Martin County

2,250

($10,133)

McLeod County

5,280

($8,446)

Meeker County

3,070

($8,838)

Mille Lacs County

3,330

($7,523)

Morrison County

3,940

($7,628)

Mower County

3,800

($12,080)

Murray County

920

($8,821)

Nicollet County

4,800

($12,225)

Nobles County

1,780

($9,548)

Norman County

560

($7,843)

Olmsted County

27,670

($12,075)

Otter Tail County

7,220

($9,895)

Pennington County

1,410

($9,428)

Pine County

3,250

($6,833)

Pipestone County

910

($9,429)

Polk County

3,530

($9,159)

Pope County

1,410

($11,089)

Ramsey County

85,430

($12,890)

Red Lake County

330

($6,961)

Redwood County

1,430

($9,198)

Renville County

1,560

($10,617)

Rice County

9,820

($10,147)

Rock County

1,000

($8,636)

Roseau County

1,490

($15,577)

Saint Louis County

25,790

($10,466)

Scott County

32,020

($12,654)

Sherburne County

18,070

($9,312)

Sibley County

1,990

($8,249)

Stearns County

20,400

($11,553)

Steele County

5,500

($8,791)

Stevens County

1,090

($11,858)

Swift County

830

($10,023)

Todd County

2,150

($7,509)

Traverse County

350

($10,640)

Wabasha County

3,130

($9,250)

Wadena County

1,220

($7,678)

Waseca County

2,340

($8,101)

Washington County

59,260

($13,930)

Watonwan County

1,010

($8,007)

Wilkin County

720

($10,069)

Winona County

5,560

($10,578)

Wright County

25,580

($9,964)

Yellow Medicine County

1,010

($8,663)

 
Information based on a National Association of Counties analysis of 2015 Internal Revenue Service data.
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