Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Kyrillos, Kean & Beck Say Cuts In Tax Rebates, Property Tax Deductions & Aid Should Be Last On Corzine’s List

Monmouth County Senators Joe Kyrillos, Sean Kean and Jen Beck expressed disappointment, but not surprise, that Governor Corzine chose to come to Monmouth County to hold a “kitchen table” press conference. The governor is desperate to convince middle-class families that his proposal to eliminate rebates and property tax deductions won’t drive more of them from New Jersey by making the state even more unaffordable. Monmouth County residents will be among the hardest hit if his spending plan is approved:

“Governor Corzine won office in 2005 with a campaign that promised lower property taxes over the duration of his term,” Kyrillos stated. “It never happened. The governor never even proposed legislation that would meet this promise. In 2006, he raised sales taxes and agreed to use the money for higher rebates. After just one year, those rebates disappeared for many middle-class New Jersey families. Only the tax hike remains. Now he plans to cut the rebates as well as the property tax deduction.”

“Governor Corzine could have considered common-sense Republican proposals for eliminating billions of dollars of unnecessary and unjustifiable spending over the last three years,” Senator Sean Kean said. “If he had done so, the draconian cuts he is making in rebates might not have been necessary because we would have a far larger surplus to rely on today.”

“The borrowing that this governor has done without voter approval has locked us into debt payments that can not be deferred,” Senator Beck said. “For this governor, raising taxes and cutting municipal and education aid that benefits middle class has always been preferable to slowing the huge growth in state debt and spending. It is insulting that the governor is coming to Monmouth to sell his fourth budget that shortchanges the hardworking middle class residents of this county.”

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Removing the property tax "rebate" equates to an immediate $1000 tax increase to me. So ... here's a big FU to you, Mr. Governor. Thanks. Do you realize the subtle trickle down impact these decisions will have on this state? Here's an example for you:
No tax rebate = no summer familty weekend trip to the shore = no $ spent on a NJ Hotel = no $ spent on NJ local attractions = no $ spent on NJ restaurants = no toll revenue for the trip = no beach fees for the beach I would have gone to = no gas $ paid to a NJ gas station ETC.

Anonymous said...

joe kyrillos finally woke up? aww, that's nice.

Anonymous said...

What amazes me more than anything is how the public remains as gullible as they are. When Corzine ran he made promises that pandered to the electorate that any thinking person would know couldn't be kept. In fact, many people pointed out exactly why they couldn't be kept, but he still won the election. This past year, Obama ran making promises that pandered to the electorate that any thinking person would know couldn't be kept. In fact, many people pointed out exactly why they couldn't be kept. In two months, Obama has already proven he is not who he claimed to be. Yet, the people of New Jersey, smack in the middle of the Corzine experience, voted overwhelmingly for Obama. You know what? They deserve what they get. I'm just pi$$ed that I have to pay for their stupidity.

Anonymous said...

since Republicans at the Fed and State level keep spending more even when they have control what do we expect. Until real Republicans take back our party the voters just won't care. Look at Monmouth. For how many years did the GOP Freeholders keep wasting money paying a fortune to outside legal counsel because they were contributors or someones buddy. Geeeeze.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 8:53

And your real republicans are? Check his registration. Step up or shut up!

Anonymous said...

Corzine is also messing with our kids. He has Superintendents and School Boards all over the state working on regionalization plans that will never pass the referendums required in the law. This distracts everyone from working towards fixing the parts of the system that are clearly not functioning. He should leave the high performing districts that operate below average cost out of his PR driven scheme. Perhaps he should use them as a model to fix the districts the state operate or funds completely.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 10:37. Right and you clowns expect our support? No wonder the dems now control. Why would anybody step up to support incompetence.