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To: Sam Citron who wrote (100126)4/12/2000 3:09:00 PM
From: Sam Citron  Respond to of 164684
 
State governors blast net tax panel for interference with state sovereignty

April 12, 2000
NY Times

Governors Criticize Internet Tax Panel

By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON

More than two-thirds of the nation's 50 governors today will deliver
to Congress a scathing bipartisan attack on the Internet tax
commission, denouncing it as a forum for special interests seeking tax
breaks while threatening the system in which states set their own tax
policies to pay for police, firefighters and schools.

The letters come as the Republican leadership in
Congress conducts a series of events to toast
the report by an advisory commission that
would effectively continue the exemption from
sales taxes on products sold by companies that
operate only in cyberspace. National retailers
with bricks-and-mortar stores would have to
continue collecting sales taxes on all sales,
including those over the Internet.

By last night, 36 governors, most of whom have
reputations as tax cutters, had signed a letter
saying that Congress should not interfere with
the right of each state to determine its tax policy.

The most important reason to oppose the
Internet tax commission's report "is that it would
substantially interfere with state sovereignty," the governors wrote.

"The U.S. Constitution was very clear in both ensuring state sovereignty
and creating a critical balance between federal and state authority.

For well over 200 years the federal government has respected state
sovereignty and has been extremely careful not to interfere with the
states' ability to independently raise revenues. This proposal would
dramatically undercut this precedent," the governors wrote.

The letter also says that the Internet tax commission ignored its mandate,
instead pursuing special interest tax breaks sought by companies with
seats on the commission.

"Instead of addressing the requirements laid out in the law to recommend
a new state and local sales tax system to provide for fairness and
balance," the governors wrote, "the proposal chose to use this
opportunity to seek a host of new and expensive special tax breaks. We
urge you to reject the report."

The letter was signed by 19 Republicans, 15 Democrats and two
independents, Jesse Ventura of Minnesota and Angus King of Maine.

Four other governors sent separate letters supporting state sovereignty in
taxation as a Constitutional principle, but not attacking the Internet tax
commission.

Among the governors who did not sign the letter were George W. Bush
of Texas, Jeb Bush of Florida, George E. Pataki of New York and
James S. Gilmore 3rd of Virginia, all Republicans, and Gray Davis of
California, a Democrat. Governor Gilmore headed the Internet tax
commission.

The support for a tax-free Internet has caused deep divisions between
Capitol Hill Republicans and Republicans who run statehouses and city
halls, where sales taxes are the largest single source of revenue.

The Capitol Hill Republicans are also under attack from retailers ranging
from organizations of mom-and-pop merchants to Wal-Mart, the nation's
largest retailer. Only a handful of large retailers favor the proposal to
keep the Internet exempt from sales taxes.

Republicans on Capitol Hill, who say any tax cut is a good tax cut, see
the Internet as critical to future prosperity and want to be seen as its
protector from taxes.

But in a sign that solid support among Congressional Republicans for a
tax-free Internet is weakening in Washington, Senator John McCain
yesterday quietly canceled plans for the Senate Commerce Committee to
vote tomorrow on a bill to extend the Internet Tax Freedom Act for three
years to 2006. The withdrawal was revealed when the issue did not
appear on the committee agenda.

Mark Buse, the committee staff director, said the planned vote was
delayed indefinitely "at the request of Senators who wanted more time to
look at the issue and find out if they are in favor of a moratorium or favor
new taxes on their constituents."

Mr. Buse said Senator McCain
favors "stepping back and taking a
larger view" of Internet taxation and
wants to avoid "a rush to judgment on
how to impose taxes" on goods and
services.

The commission, Mr. Buse said, "was too highly political and did not
provide any glide plan to answer these complex questions."

Raymond C. Scheppach, executive director of the National Governors
Association, said he was delighted that Senator McCain has delayed
action. "This means we are getting through" with the message that "who
has the right to cut taxes in the states. Is it the federal government or is it
the states?"

Gov. Michael O. Leavitt of Utah, a tax-cutting Republican who
organized other governors to sign the letter, said he, too, opposes taxes
aimed at the Internet, but that protecting the Internet as a tax-exempt
zone will distort the economy and shift power to Washington.

"I do not believe the Internet should be taxed. No bit taxes, no
bandwidth taxes, no access taxes. We should not do anything that will
inhibit this powerful engine of economic growth. But that is not the issue
here. The issue is whether the states will determine their own tax policy
and whether business will have a level playing field. This is about whether
local government will be allowed to function independently of the national
government."

Governor Leavitt said he persuaded so many governors to sign the letter
because they "see this as the most significant federalism issue we have
faced in this century."



To: Sam Citron who wrote (100126)4/12/2000 3:14:00 PM
From: H James Morris  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
>You should be thinking about adding to your position, rather than liquidating,
Sam, hello! I'm not thinking about liquidating my Msft shares. If you knew how many I have you'd be more understanding.
All I did was ask Goldman to match my long shares with short shares a few weeks ago.
The only thing I have to worry about is when to cast those short shares free.
Everything else you said...I agree with you 150%.