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Press Release
For Immediate Release - June 5, 2001
Contact: Betsy Leondar-Wright
(617)
423-2148 x13
bleondar-wright@faireconomy.org
Estate Tax Repeal Opponents:
"The Battle Isn't Over Yet"
"Reports
of the death of the estate tax have been greatly exaggerated.
The decision to postpone its execution for nine years gives common
sense plenty of time to prevail over the hazards of wholesale
repeal, which would widen the already vast wealth gap."
Chuck Collins, co-founder of Responsible Wealth
President Bush
won a primarily symbolic victory with the tax cut bill he will sign
Thursday, according to opponents of estate tax repeal.
The bill is
so full of hidden costs, accounting tricks, delays and sunset provisions
that it surely will not become permanent law in its entirety, according
to Chuck Collins. The question remains which parts will be implemented,
the much-needed breaks for working families or the
irresponsible giveaways to the very wealthy.
The estate tax
repeal doesnt go into effect until 2010, and applies only
to those who die in the year 2010. In 2011, a sunset provision returns
the estate tax to current law, which specifies a $1 million exemption
starting in 2006.
Bill Gates,
Sr., co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and lead
signer of Responsible Wealths Call to Preserve the Estate
Tax, says, "This gradual reform of the estate tax over the
next few years - a $1 million exemption in 2002, $2 million in 2006
- is just what we have been advocating instead of complete repeal.
We feel we won a partial victory in delaying full repeal."
The hypocrisy
with which repeal proponents used small businesses to hide their
true agenda of more riches for the super-rich is now obvious, as
the final bill eliminates in 2004 the higher exemption for family-owned
business. Small business owner Martin Rothenberg says, "This
bait-and-switch tactic shows that we small business owners were
nothing but a smokescreen.
There are many ways the government can support family businesses,
and estate tax repeal isnt one of them. I dont resent
being asked to give back to the public coffers when I die."
Gary Bass, Executive
Director of OMB Watch and chair of the nonprofit coalition against
estate tax repeal, says, "The American people are catching
on to all the tricks and booby traps in this bill. We are confident
that nine years from now, the death tax myths will give
way to responsible concern for federal and state revenue and charitable
giving."
Collins adds,
"In 4 short months, Responsible Wealth organized 1,000 wealthy
people to preserve the estate tax and, with OMB Watch, formed a
coalition of hundreds of groups opposed to repeal. With a 10-year
lead time, imagine how much opposition we could mount!"
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