Friday, November 16, 2007

King Statement

I was forwarded a copy of a statement released by the aforementioned Delegate James King. This is the statement, without any commentary:

Dear Friends,

Many of you have expressed disappointment in my vote for approving the
referendum on slots. First and foremost, let me say that this vote was a
vote against even higher taxes in Maryland.

There has been a rumor that if the referendum died, Mike Miller would kill
all of the tax bills. Though I wish that were the truth, the fact of the
matter is that Mike Miller has no control over the tax packages. Mike Miller
and the Senate passed a 1.4 Billion dollar tax package that currently sits
on The Speakers desk. He can not pull that bill back, it is out of the
Senate and in the control of the House. The House can simply vote that tax
package up or down, and as we have seen in recent days, they certainly have
the votes to increase taxes.
There is absolutely no merit whatsoever to the idea that killing the
referendum would have killed the tax packages, I wish it were that easy.

The reality of the situation is that if the referendum failed, the Democrats
would have increased the current tax package, most likely in the form of
raising the sales tax from 6% to 7%. Regardless of where you stand on slots,
if passed, it will bring hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue into
this state. If those revenues do not come from slots, where do you think
they will come from? They will come in the form of taxes from the hard
working families of this state! I can not in good conscious vote to burden
the working families of this state any more, and have consistently voted
against any and all new or increased taxes. I believe my voting record
stands for itself.

It is also important to recognize that close to 80% of each county in
Maryland is in favor of a slots referendum. The people want a voice in this,
and they have overwhelmingly asked us to give it to them, how do we in good
faith ignore them? I was sent to Annapolis to represent those individuals
and they have spoken loud and clear.

I agree that it is important to "Hold the Party Line" in many instances, and
have always done so, but at what cost? I believe that you must draw a line
when "Holding the Party Line" hurts the taxpayers of this state. I have
stood with the Republican Party on every issue to date, but if trying to
make the other guy look bad trumps doing what is right for the taxpayers of
this state, I will vote for the taxpayers!

Nine months ago, I stood with only 4 other Republicans, and voted against
one of the worst budgets in the history of this state. A budget that largely
contributed to the 1.7 Billion dollar structural deficit. I was extremely
vocal that "voting for Governor O'Malleys budget, would create an enormous
structural deficit". I warned that "taxes of historical proportions would
follow". I was told by my fellow Republicans that I was right, but voting
against the Governors budget would finish me in Annapolis, and my opponents
would use it against me in my next election. Regardless, I stood up, voiced
my opinion, and cast a tough vote, because it was the right thing to do, and
I stand by that vote.

My vote today was also a tough vote to say the least, but I stand by that
vote as well. I will look out for the taxpayers of Maryland at all costs,
and I truly believe that I did so today! For those of you who know me well,
you know that I do what I believe is right for my constituents, regardless
of political pressure, threats, or popularity. This job is not about doing
the easy thing, it is about doing the right thing! You may not agree with
today's vote, but I truly hope you will respect it!

Sincerely,

James J. King
State Delegate
District 33A

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

We all know that Senate President Mike Miller never would allow Conference Committee votes on the Tax bills now in his possesion - (they left the House when the House votes were taken the other day - Our Good Delegate King obviously does not understand the procedures of the House, after the vote is taken the Bill goes to the other body). Without the Slots Bill - Del. King just voted to enable the biggest tax increase in Maryland History and He does not think you are smart enough to understand this - Please write Delegate King and tell Him you won't be fooled.

Martin Watcher said...

Delegate King's statement shows a lack of understanding of the way the General Assembly works and the way politics work in Maryland. He states on one hand that the Senate has already passed a bill and therefore cannot stop the tax increase, but in the next sentence states that he voted for slots to stop higher taxes. While he is correct that the House could accept the Senate tax package directly, it cannot make any changes to that bill without the Senate re-voting on the bill, something Mike Miller vowed would not happen. In fact, if the House adopted the Senate plan, it would be a better bill for Maryland's business climate than the House proposal. The House tax increase includes crippling taxes such as a hotel tax increase, combined reporting, and a 20% increase in the Corporate Income Tax. The Senate bill, while still bad, is not as crippling for small businesses and corporations that Maryland needs in order to remain competitive. King's vote is a disappointment to say the least, and his reasoning shows he doesn't fully understand the legislative process.

Anonymous said...

Why are we put into a corner and only given two options: taxes or slots? Why is King telling us that we have to choose between slots or new taxes? I say no new taxes and I say don't use slots as a way to get out of limiting government spending. The slots issue is like duck tape to a redneck. These legislators want to use slots as the great answer to every funding shortfall. Slots will save education funding, slots will fix the shortfall.

Is anyone really crunching the numbers here? We have a $1.4 billion dollar tax increase plus millions from slots. Won't we end up surpassing the shortfall with the additional slots revenue?

streiff said...

I read this statement and I was reminded of the first episode of Homicide

Munch: Okay, now I get it. You're saving your really good lies for some smarter cop, is that it? I'm just a donut in the on-deck circle. Wait until the real guy gets here. Wait till that big guy comes back. I'm probably just his secretary. I'm just Montel Williams. You wanna talk to Larry King!
Suspect: I'm telling the truth!
Munch: I have been a murder police for 10 years. If you're gonna lie to me, you lie to me with respect. Now what is it? Is it my shoes? Is it my haircut? Got a problem with my haircut? Don't you ever again lie to me like I'm Montel Williams. I am not Montel Williams. I am not Montel Williams!

Apparently we don't rate a good lie.

Voice of WAMD said...

I agree with “Martin Watcher” on this post. At a time when the opportunity to stand up for Maryland was at hand, in the end, we were let down by people who don’t understand the process.
How sad is that. The Governor mandated a special secession and the legislators by law had to comply. A conservative estimate of $500,000.00 was spent on this political Foley in a time of supposed financial crisis. The real end game to this was to free up martin’s time to allow him to campaign for clinton, and to show that he knows how to extract taxes from a unwilling population. Registered Democrats have to look at their party and wonder when did we become socialist? When did, for the good of the people, morph into for the good of the party and damn the state. Every citizen of the state, from Ocean City to Oakland should be good and mad. So what can we do about it? We can vote for people who truly represent our interest. They are counting on the steam leaking out of the kettle by the time that happens. Our one immediate act of true defiance is to change our party affiliation. If you want to send a message to marty and the mikes, a mass exodus from the Democratic party will make them sit up and pay attention. Now you have options. Personally, I would like to see you all come into the Republican party. When it comes down to it, philosophically, most of you already are you just don’t know it. If that does not appeal to you but you want to make your anger heard immediately, change to the Green Party or the Libertarians or any one of a number of other parties that may better serve your interest. You can change party affiliations once a month if you want just to blur the true numbers of registered voters. If the party in power can not point to decisive numbers to justify their power, they may start to listen to the emails, calls and hooking horns in front of the campaign headquarters. A couple thousand will not cause a ripple. A couple hundred thousand will.

You have to wait to vote, but you don’t have to wait to send a very clear message. This government does not represent its constituents. It can not be allowed to operate to the detriment of its citizens. It should not be allowed to think that it does. Change your party affiliation from Democrat to anything, sign the confidence petition that is going around and don’t take it with out your voice being listened to. The slots referendum will be voted on during a Presidential
Election year which should guarantee a large turn out. If the referendum is turned down, you can expect another “Special Secession” the second week of November 2008. It is like a bad movie that keeps coming back. omalley tax grab II.. Hundreds of Thousands changed party affiliations will be a “virtual taizer” shocking those in power. If everybody in the state changed party affiliations once a month, it would be a defining act of defiance unprecedented in the history of this country. Are we ready to stage a bloodless revolt.

We can only look inside our self to know the answer. When the time comes, chose the party you want and vote your true feelings. Until then, keep um guessing.

Anonymous said...

Del King should be replaced in the primary of 2010. I know I am not in his district but what he did was shameless and stupid! I will support in any way an whoever goes against him in the primary with my money.

Ron Miner said...

Mr. King has no principles and he proved it by voting with the Dumocrats. So they threaten to raise the sales tax to 7% SO WHAT....Stand up for YOUR principals, don't cower in the corner like a spineless jellyfish...You vote YOUR principles...that's what your constituents sent you to Annapolis to do...If the Dumocrats raise the sales tax to 7% then it will be the Dumocrats who pay for it politically in 2010.

I urge all Marylanders to vote against the slots referendum simply as a way to show our anger over these tax increases...

Mr. King, your political career is toast..you can't be trusted with our vote in the legislature any further than we can throw you...have a nice day...

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