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Judy Warnick's effort to block income tax fails

| April 6, 2017 1:00 AM

OLYMPIA — On March 7, the state Senate’s Democrat minority blocked a proposed constitutional amendment that would ban a tax on individual incomes in Washington.

All 25 members of the Senate majority supported the measure, joined by two members of the Senate’s Democrat minority. However, Senate Joint Resolution 8204 required a two-thirds majority to pass, or 33 votes of the 49-member Senate.

Had the measure been approved, the state House of Representatives would also have needed to approve the measure by a two-thirds vote for it to go to voters in November.

“I am fighting to protect the will of the voters,” 13th District Senator Judy Warnick, R-Moses Lake, said.

“Since the 1930s, Washingtonians have said repeatedly that the state should not have an income tax, and this resolution would have enshrined that in our state’s constitution.

“I believe it is a necessary measure to prevent special-interest groups from finding ways, as they have tried in Olympia and are now proposing in Seattle, from taking more taxpayer funds for pet projects.

State spending has nearly doubled since the start of this century, Warnick said. But the state’s population has increased by only 20 percent. Warnick said the push for more revenue is unwarranted and detrimental to our state’s economy as a whole and for families who would be hit hard by a tax on their income.

“The more money the taxpayers have in their pockets, the better,” she said. “State government doesn’t need another revenue source that would allow endless spending.”