House Bill Proposes Surtax to Pay for Escalating Afghanistan War

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

If the United States is going to send another 30,000 soldiers to Afghanistan, which means billions of dollars more in costs, then the government should have the ability to pay for it, instead of just borrowing more money or robbing other programs of their funding. This is the belief of Representative David Obey (D-WI), chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, who has introduced the Share the Sacrifice Act of 2010. The measure would add a 1% surtax on income taxes beginning in 2011 (or 2012 if President Barack Obama deems the economy too weak to impose the tax). For Americans earning more than $150,000 a year, the tax would amount to another $220. For families earning $50,000 annually, they would have to pay about $50 more in taxes.

 
“Regardless of whether one favors the war or not, if it is to be fought, it ought to be paid for,” says Obey, who admits his plan will have a tough time gaining support. “The problem in this country is that the only people who have been asked to sacrifice are military families, and they have had to go to the well again and again and again, and everybody else is blithely unaffected by the war.”
-Noel Brinkerhoff
 
'If It is to be Fought, It Ought to be Paid for' (by Walter Pincus, Washington Post)
Afghan War Surtax (by Jamie Dupree, WSB Radio)
HR 4130 (House Appropriations Committee) (PDF)

Comments

Jason 14 years ago
This makes sense-we should stop raising our national debt However, where were the democrats when Obama proposed borrowing $1 Trillion for the stimulus bill? If we're going to talk balanced budgets (i.e. don't spend what you can't pay for), it should apply across the board. $30B for Afghanistan is a drop in the bucket compared to billions in bailouts for Bank of America, Chrysler, GM, and other failing companies. I think Bank of America alone received $25B, and no democrat questioned giving them all that money.

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