The ad also claims Romney ?raised job-killing taxes and fees by $700 million, leaving Massachusetts over $1 billion in debt.?
We?ve written many times about Romney?s dubious claim never to have raised taxes as governor. Technically, Romney never raised personal income taxes, but he did increase fees by hundreds of thousands of dollars, and he also closed loopholes on some corporate taxes.
But there is some disagreement over the $700 million figure cited in the ad. The Massachusetts Department of Administration and Finance put the fee total at $260 million a year and the corporate tax change at $174 million a year, and the independent Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation said both fees and taxes totaled $740 million to $750 million a year.
Whatever the figure, however, it did not leave Massachusetts ?over $1 billion in debt.?
The Red White and Blue Fund is referring to a projected budget shortfall predicted by Romney aides in the waning days of Romney?s term. It was a projected deficit for the fiscal year beginning six months after Romney left office.
Based on assumptions about tax revenues and the growing cost of pensions, Medicaid and other state programs, the aides projected incoming Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick would need to come up with a budget plan to close a gap of between $400,000 and $1.1 billion in the state?s $26 billion budget the following year in order to comply with the state?s balanced budget requirement, according to a Dec. 30, 2006, story in the Boston Globe. The ad chose the high end of that projected deficit.
Moreover, it was not an actual debt. It was a budget projection. And, as it turns out, tax revenues came in much higher than expected due to an improving economy, largely erasing the projected deficit, said Michael Widmer, president of the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation. It?s true that Romney?s successor signed a $1-a-pack tax on cigarettes to help pay for the cost of Romney?s health care law, but that tax didn?t go into effect until a year after Romney left office.
To characterize that as Romney leaving Massachusetts with a $1 billion debt is ?largely inaccurate,? Widmer said. ?It?s an analytical exercise? he said, to help with budget planning. And again, the state ultimately passed a balanced budget, as required by state law.
One other note: Neither Romney nor any governor of Massachusetts has absolute control of the budgets. Massachusetts has a powerful state Legislature, and during Romney?s term as governor, it was overwhelmingly Democratic.
Widmer said Romney?s proposed budgets were largely ignored by the state Legislature. Instead, the Legislature passed its own budget. The governor can?t add anything to the Legislature?s budget but can exercise a line-item veto. But as we have previously reported,? more than 700 of the roughly 800 vetoes issued by Romney were overridden by the Massachusetts Legislature.
In ?America?s Future,? the Red White and Blue Fund attacks Obama for U.S. reliance on foreign oil and the high price of gasoline. But the ad?s lack of context and false association serve to mislead viewers.
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