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McCain: No new taxes

 
 
Miller
 
Reply Sun 17 Feb, 2008 08:33 pm
Feb. 17, 2008, 4:29PM
McCain promises no new taxes

WASHINGTON ?- Republican John McCain said there will be no new taxes during his administration if he is elected president.

"No new taxes," the likely GOP presidential nominee said during a taped interview broadcast Sunday.

McCain told ABC's This Week that under no circumstances would he increase taxes, and added that he could "see an argument, if our economy continues to deteriorate, for lower interest rates, lower tax rates and certainly decreasing corporate tax rates," as well as giving people the ability to write off depreciation and eliminating the alternative minimum tax.

McCain was defending his support for an extension of tax cuts sought by President Bush, which McCain voted against. The Arizona senator now says allowing the tax breaks to expire would amount to an unacceptable tax increase.

Later Sunday, the Democratic Party criticized McCain's statements on continuing the tax cuts, saying his policies would not differ from the past eight years under the Bush administration.

"John McCain showed today that he is about as far from a maverick as they come," said Karen Finney, spokeswoman for the Democratic National Committee.

McCain's "no new taxes" statement marked a turnaround. Last September, he was forced to defend his refusal to sign a no-new-tax pledge offered by the conservative Americans for Tax Reform.

"I stand on my record," he said during a televised debate in Durham, N.H. "I don't have to sign pledges."

The leading contender for his party's presidential nomination, McCain blamed out-of-control spending for a lack of enthusiasm among Republican voters.

McCain said the $35 billion worth of spending on special projects that Bush signed into law in the last two years amounts to a $1,000 tax credit for every child in America, and would have been better for the economy if spent that way.

McCain also said he was open to the idea of helping homeowners facing foreclosure, provided they were "legitimate borrowers" and not "engaged in speculation."

chron.com
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 509 • Replies: 3
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 17 Feb, 2008 08:33 pm
Read my lips.
0 Replies
 
parados
 
  1  
Reply Sun 17 Feb, 2008 08:39 pm
Considering the largest tax increase in US history is set to take place in 2011, I don't see how McCain can promise anything of the sort. McCain can't pass legislation on his own to extend the tax cuts even if he is Presdient.
0 Replies
 
hanno
 
  1  
Reply Mon 18 Feb, 2008 09:59 pm
2011's a long way ahead, I think he can pull it off. I hope he does.
0 Replies
 
 

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