A day after the Senate approved a bill raising income taxes at most levels, the House narrowly pushed through a multifaceted tax package Saturday that would raise taxes on upper-bracket earners, replace mortgage interest deductions with tax credits and take a deeper slice out of smokers and drinkers.
The DFL-crafted House bill, which would raise $1.5 billion to help close the state's daunting $4.6 billion budget deficit, strikes a middle posture between the DFL Senate's $2.2 billion plan and Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty's $1 billion measure that raises revenue through bond sales rather than new taxes.
Pawlenty, however, seemed as little impressed with the House bill as he was with the Senate package. Even while the tax debate raged on the House floor Saturday evening, Pawlenty vowed to veto the bill and said he was "deeply disappointed" that legislators would raise taxes "in these challenging times."
"Your bill creates a new income tax rate placing Minnesota in the unenviable position of being tied for the fourth-highest tax rate in the country," Pawlenty wrote in a letter to Rep. Ann Lenczewski, DFL-Bloomington, chairwoman of the tax committee.
Debate at times was heated as defenders of the package sought to portray it as badly needed reform legislation that also solved the state's deficit, and opponents darkly warned that the bill would hurt Minnesotans at all levels and, by striking several deductions, low-income citizens most of all.
Minority Leader Marty Seifert, R-Marshall, told members that the legislation was "the single worst bill" he's seen in his 12 years in the House.
To DFLers, Seifert said: "Think about your constituents, not about what your party leadership is telling you to do."
Eighteen DFLers took Seifert's advice, joining all 47 Republicans in voting against the bill. But those 65 nays fell just short of the 68 votes that the majority mustered to pass the bill.