WhoRunsTheStates Badge.png
Who Runs Your State Government?
Does your state lean blue or lean red? Check out our new report, highlighting partisan control of state government from 1992-2013.






Alabama Tax Shift Proposition (2008)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Not on Ballot
Proposed allot measures that were not on a ballot
This measure did not or
will not appear on a ballot

The Alabama Tax Shift Proposition had been proposed for the November 2008 ballot in Alabama by a vote of 63-38 in the Alabama state house. The measure then went to the state senate and needed 21 votes there to earn it a place on the ballot.[1] On May 8, the senate came up one vote short, with time remaining in the legislative session there were thought to be other opportunities to re-consider, but this did not occur.[2]

The measure would have amended the state's constitution; it would have raised the overall tax burden in the state by about $25 million, while reducing taxes for about 80% of the state's residents and increasing it for 20%.

Specifically, it would have:

  • Eliminate the state's current 4% sales tax on groceries
  • Eliminate the right of Alabama taxpayers to deduct from their Alabama income taxes what they pay to the federal government in income taxes.
  • Raise the standard deduction and add new exemptions, thus reducing the state income tax burden for many middle-income households.

References

  1. Birmingham News, Alabama House passes plan to remove sales tax on groceries; Senate approval would send measure to voters, April 16, 2008
  2. Montgomery Advertiser, Senate blocks grocery tax bill, May 9, 2008
Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Encyclopedia
Calendars
Get Involved
Donate
Toolbox