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Florida GOP says Charlie Crist raised taxes $2.2 billion
The Republican Party of Florida was quick to respond to Charlie Crist’s first campaign commercial, released on July 7, 2014, with its own ad alleging Crist was not being honest with voters.
The party’s ad replayed Crist’s ad with a virtual remote pausing the video and offering reaction. After Crist’s ad claims he cut taxes, the GOP responds: "Fact: Crist raised taxes by $2.2 billion." A voiceover says, "Nice try, Charlie; Crist raised taxes on the middle class by billions of dollars."
We handled Crist’s claim about cutting property taxes here, but these stats don’t really match up. Could Crist have cut taxes and raised taxes like the GOP claimed? Time to tally the balance sheet.
Budget crunch
In the throes of the Great Recession and with home values in freefall, Florida faced a $6 billion budget gap in 2009.
The Republican-led Legislature’s answer? Implementing $2.2 billion in new taxes and fees.
The panoply of hikes included a $1-a-pack cigarette tax, increased court costs and fees on things like fishing at the beach or off bridges, plus the increase in auto tag fees the Legislature repealed in 2014. The jump in taxes and fees was a necessary evil, lawmakers said, to deal with the holes in the budget. Crist, who was a Republican as governor, signed the budget on May 29.
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The commercial says these were increases on the middle class, but that’s debatable, since more than just middle-class Floridians were affected by the moves. No definition of middle class is given in the ad, in any case.
The commercial also implies that Crist somehow lied about cutting property taxes, when cutting property taxes was actually a separate budget issue in a previous year. Crist did sign legislation that cut taxes for low-income seniors and Florida homeowners.
But the tax increases put Crist in critical crosshairs, since he had pledged no new taxes for Floridians while campaigning in 2006.
You can’t totally blame Charlie for breaking his promise, however. Lawmakers tied the various increases to funding for schools and Medicaid, to make sure Crist wouldn’t take them out of the budget with a line-item veto.
Our ruling
The Republican Party of Florida said, "Crist raised taxes on the middle class by billions of dollars."
Crist did sign a budget in 2009 that included $2.2 billion in new taxes and fees, breaking a campaign promise that Floridians would not have to pay new taxes. But the ideas came from the Republican-led Legislature, who made it very difficult for their Republican governor to veto the hikes. This is not specified in the GOP’s commercial in any way, nor is the term "middle class" defined, although the middle class was clearly affected.
We rate the statement Mostly True.
Our Sources
YouTube video, "Sunshine," July 7, 2014
YouTube video, "Not Buying It," July 8, 2014
Miami Herald, "Gov. Crist signs $66.5 billion budget, breaks tax pledge," May 27, 2009
Interview with Amy Baker, Office of Economic & Demographic Research coordinator, July 8-10, 2014
Interview with Susan Hepworth, Republican Party of Florida spokeswoman, July 9, 2014
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Florida GOP says Charlie Crist raised taxes $2.2 billion
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