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In Georgia, Norquist has intervened in two recent tax debates, forcing a tax policy group to convene a special meeting declaring that its plan to revamp the tax code would be revenue-neutral. Norquist then withdrew his opposition. Now, he is excoriating Republican lawmakers for voting in private to block a bill that would allow sales of alcohol on Sundays, a move that would bring more revenue to the state. Not all Republicans agree with Norquist's approach. Even Christie, whose tax-cutting, union-fighting ways win kudos from Norquist, has not signed the pledge. "He's taken strong positions to rein in spending and huge cost-drivers in government, specifically unsustainable public employee pension and health benefits," said Christie spokesman, Kevin Roberts. "Actually leading on these issues, as Gov. Christie has been doing, is the most important thing for public officials today." Another Republican, Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval said he is against tax increases but declined to sign the pledge in 2009, saying he did not want to limit his options. "I would rather show what I'm going to do through my actions," he said then.
Former California state Assemblyman Roger Niello said the pledge has become "a policy straitjacket" that prevents rational debate about tax policy, even among conservatives who generally share the same philosophy. "There are those from outside elected positions that will very aggressively use it in a campaign and say that the lack of somebody's signature on that pledge means that they want to raise taxes, which is a bit of a perversion," said Niello, who did not sign the pledge and lost a Republican primary race last year for a state Senate seat. "They (lawmakers) are motivated by fear." Two current Republican state senators, Sam Blakeslee, of San Luis Obispo, and Anthony Cannella, of Ceres, have not signed it, along with Assemblyman Bill Berryhill, R-Ceres. Norquist, who has been involved in national Republican politics since the early 1980s, said any lawmaker in California who signed his pledge and votes for Brown's budget proposal would violate the pledge. He said Brown's call for a special election on the taxes is akin to voting for the taxes themselves. "If the pledge that people take is to oppose and vote against tax increases, putting a tax increase on the ballot is moving forward a tax increase," he told the AP. California's state sales tax is the highest in the nation, and trails only Tennessee when average local sales taxes are included, according to the Washington, D.C.-based Tax Foundation. While Norquist says a vote to put taxes on the ballot would violate the pledge in California, Americans for Tax Reform gave a green light for Republican lawmakers to place a similar measure on the ballot in Arizona in 2009, as long as they approved accompanying budget cuts. Voters subsequently approved the sales tax increase, which was proposed by GOP Gov. Jan Brewer. Norquist's involvement prompted the Arizona Daily Star to editorialize about why lawmakers there were waiting for "his permission," noting that he does not live or pay taxes in Arizona. In an editorial, the newspaper said, "Legislators beholden to Norquist's pledge don't deserve their jobs."
[Associated
Press;
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