Oklahoma raises taxes on oil, gas, and cigarettes to give teachers their first raise since 2007

Confounding

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Jan 31, 2016
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I'm sure Republicans will be here saying that those teachers didn't need a pay raise after 11 years of not getting one.

Oklahoma raises taxes on oil, gas, and cigarettes to give teachers their first raise since 2007

Republicans took full control of Oklahoma's government in the Tea Party-fueled 2010 elections, and they quickly set about slashing taxes, joining neighboring Kansas in launching a grand experiment to showcase the GOP's supply-side theory of economics. Kansas lawmakers had enough last year, voting to raise taxes over Gov. Sam Brownback's (R) veto, and on Wednesday night, Oklahoma lawmakers gave final approval to a bill that will generate $450 million in new revenue from a $1-a-pack surcharge on cigarettes, increasing the gas tax by 3 cents and 6 cent for diesel, and raising taxes on oil and gas production to 5 percent, from 2 percent.

"We finally got the job done," Gov. Mary Fallin (R) said after the Senate approved the bill, 36-10 — barely meeting the state's constitutional requirement of three-fourths majorities for tax increases. Fallin said she "absolutely" plans to sign the bill, which the state House passed Monday. The extra revenue will go largely to fund an average $6,100 pay increase for teachers, who are planning to walk out of class on Monday. The oil and tobacco industries lobbied heavily against the bill, and anti-tax advocates are urging electoral retribution.
 
It was inevitable that the Tea Party strategy was bound to fail...Since all they were doing was aping Kansas...
 
I'm sure Republicans will be here saying that those teachers didn't need a pay raise after 11 years of not getting one.

Oklahoma raises taxes on oil, gas, and cigarettes to give teachers their first raise since 2007

Republicans took full control of Oklahoma's government in the Tea Party-fueled 2010 elections, and they quickly set about slashing taxes, joining neighboring Kansas in launching a grand experiment to showcase the GOP's supply-side theory of economics. Kansas lawmakers had enough last year, voting to raise taxes over Gov. Sam Brownback's (R) veto, and on Wednesday night, Oklahoma lawmakers gave final approval to a bill that will generate $450 million in new revenue from a $1-a-pack surcharge on cigarettes, increasing the gas tax by 3 cents and 6 cent for diesel, and raising taxes on oil and gas production to 5 percent, from 2 percent.

"We finally got the job done," Gov. Mary Fallin (R) said after the Senate approved the bill, 36-10 — barely meeting the state's constitutional requirement of three-fourths majorities for tax increases. Fallin said she "absolutely" plans to sign the bill, which the state House passed Monday. The extra revenue will go largely to fund an average $6,100 pay increase for teachers, who are planning to walk out of class on Monday. The oil and tobacco industries lobbied heavily against the bill, and anti-tax advocates are urging electoral retribution.

It is literally impossible to make a liberal snowflake happy. The Republicans raise taxes on big oil and cigarettes for teachers and you claim republicans are going to be upset. Your brain is a pickle.
 
I'm sure Republicans will be here saying that those teachers didn't need a pay raise after 11 years of not getting one.

Oklahoma raises taxes on oil, gas, and cigarettes to give teachers their first raise since 2007

Republicans took full control of Oklahoma's government in the Tea Party-fueled 2010 elections, and they quickly set about slashing taxes, joining neighboring Kansas in launching a grand experiment to showcase the GOP's supply-side theory of economics. Kansas lawmakers had enough last year, voting to raise taxes over Gov. Sam Brownback's (R) veto, and on Wednesday night, Oklahoma lawmakers gave final approval to a bill that will generate $450 million in new revenue from a $1-a-pack surcharge on cigarettes, increasing the gas tax by 3 cents and 6 cent for diesel, and raising taxes on oil and gas production to 5 percent, from 2 percent.

"We finally got the job done," Gov. Mary Fallin (R) said after the Senate approved the bill, 36-10 — barely meeting the state's constitutional requirement of three-fourths majorities for tax increases. Fallin said she "absolutely" plans to sign the bill, which the state House passed Monday. The extra revenue will go largely to fund an average $6,100 pay increase for teachers, who are planning to walk out of class on Monday. The oil and tobacco industries lobbied heavily against the bill, and anti-tax advocates are urging electoral retribution.
Those are good choices to raise taxes on.

They are necessities (or addictions) and the demand for them is not subject to discretion.
 
I'm sure Republicans will be here saying that those teachers didn't need a pay raise after 11 years of not getting one.

Oklahoma raises taxes on oil, gas, and cigarettes to give teachers their first raise since 2007

Republicans took full control of Oklahoma's government in the Tea Party-fueled 2010 elections, and they quickly set about slashing taxes, joining neighboring Kansas in launching a grand experiment to showcase the GOP's supply-side theory of economics. Kansas lawmakers had enough last year, voting to raise taxes over Gov. Sam Brownback's (R) veto, and on Wednesday night, Oklahoma lawmakers gave final approval to a bill that will generate $450 million in new revenue from a $1-a-pack surcharge on cigarettes, increasing the gas tax by 3 cents and 6 cent for diesel, and raising taxes on oil and gas production to 5 percent, from 2 percent.

"We finally got the job done," Gov. Mary Fallin (R) said after the Senate approved the bill, 36-10 — barely meeting the state's constitutional requirement of three-fourths majorities for tax increases. Fallin said she "absolutely" plans to sign the bill, which the state House passed Monday. The extra revenue will go largely to fund an average $6,100 pay increase for teachers, who are planning to walk out of class on Monday. The oil and tobacco industries lobbied heavily against the bill, and anti-tax advocates are urging electoral retribution.
Those are good choices to raise taxes on.

They are necessities (or addictions) and the demand for them is not subject to discretion.
How is oil addictive to humans and gasoline fer that matter.....?
 
I'm sure Republicans will be here saying that those teachers didn't need a pay raise after 11 years of not getting one.

Oklahoma raises taxes on oil, gas, and cigarettes to give teachers their first raise since 2007

Republicans took full control of Oklahoma's government in the Tea Party-fueled 2010 elections, and they quickly set about slashing taxes, joining neighboring Kansas in launching a grand experiment to showcase the GOP's supply-side theory of economics. Kansas lawmakers had enough last year, voting to raise taxes over Gov. Sam Brownback's (R) veto, and on Wednesday night, Oklahoma lawmakers gave final approval to a bill that will generate $450 million in new revenue from a $1-a-pack surcharge on cigarettes, increasing the gas tax by 3 cents and 6 cent for diesel, and raising taxes on oil and gas production to 5 percent, from 2 percent.

"We finally got the job done," Gov. Mary Fallin (R) said after the Senate approved the bill, 36-10 — barely meeting the state's constitutional requirement of three-fourths majorities for tax increases. Fallin said she "absolutely" plans to sign the bill, which the state House passed Monday. The extra revenue will go largely to fund an average $6,100 pay increase for teachers, who are planning to walk out of class on Monday. The oil and tobacco industries lobbied heavily against the bill, and anti-tax advocates are urging electoral retribution.

It is literally impossible to make a liberal snowflake happy. The Republicans raise taxes on big oil and cigarettes for teachers and you claim republicans are going to be upset. Your brain is a pickle.

At least they didn't raise tax on booze, that would have been AWFUL.

Perhaps marijuana should be next. Nevada made $36.4M in tax revenue in six months. CHING!!!
 
Ignoring for a moment that the very existence of the Department of Education is unconstitutional, I've often wondered whether it might be useful for the Feds to develop a "model" compensation scale for public school teachers, including target benefit packages and pensions.

Not binding, just suggested.
 
Oklahoma should be ashamed...no raises since 07? Pathetic. Backwards and moronic.
 
I'm sure Republicans will be here saying that those teachers didn't need a pay raise after 11 years of not getting one.

Oklahoma raises taxes on oil, gas, and cigarettes to give teachers their first raise since 2007

Republicans took full control of Oklahoma's government in the Tea Party-fueled 2010 elections, and they quickly set about slashing taxes, joining neighboring Kansas in launching a grand experiment to showcase the GOP's supply-side theory of economics. Kansas lawmakers had enough last year, voting to raise taxes over Gov. Sam Brownback's (R) veto, and on Wednesday night, Oklahoma lawmakers gave final approval to a bill that will generate $450 million in new revenue from a $1-a-pack surcharge on cigarettes, increasing the gas tax by 3 cents and 6 cent for diesel, and raising taxes on oil and gas production to 5 percent, from 2 percent.

"We finally got the job done," Gov. Mary Fallin (R) said after the Senate approved the bill, 36-10 — barely meeting the state's constitutional requirement of three-fourths majorities for tax increases. Fallin said she "absolutely" plans to sign the bill, which the state House passed Monday. The extra revenue will go largely to fund an average $6,100 pay increase for teachers, who are planning to walk out of class on Monday. The oil and tobacco industries lobbied heavily against the bill, and anti-tax advocates are urging electoral retribution.

It is literally impossible to make a liberal snowflake happy. The Republicans raise taxes on big oil and cigarettes for teachers and you claim republicans are going to be upset. Your brain is a pickle.

At least they didn't raise tax on booze, that would have been AWFUL.

Perhaps marijuana should be next. Nevada made $36.4M in tax revenue in six months. CHING!!!

Colorado makes about $250 million per year in marijuana tax revenues.
 
Ignoring for a moment that the very existence of the Department of Education is unconstitutional, I've often wondered whether it might be useful for the Feds to develop a "model" compensation scale for public school teachers, including target benefit packages and pensions.

Not binding, just suggested.

Newsflash: The Education Department has nothing to do with this thread topic.
 

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