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  • 2011-07-27 (xsd:date)
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  • State Senator Sheila Harsdorf says recall election opponent Shelly Moore opposes any limit on taxes (en)
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  • Don’t confuse Shelly with Sheila in the recall election that could be key in deciding which party controls the Wisconsin state Senate. That’s the commercial message brought to you by state Sen. Sheila Harsdorf , the River Falls Republican fighting to keep her job in August 2011 -- along with seven other senators. In one of several radio ads , Harsdorf paints herself as a courageous fighter against special interests and a backer of smaller government who understands that government should serve taxpayers, not the other way around. That’s what sets Sheila apart from her opponent, union activist Shelly Moore, the Serving Taxpayers ad continues . Moore opposes any limit on taxes. This summer let’s tell Shelly Moore we can’t afford more taxes. Harsdorf voted for Gov. Scott Walker’s budget, which included a municipal property-tax freeze and tight limits on the ability of school districts to raise property taxes. She has been labeling Shelly Moore -- who has campaigned against the GOP-backed budget -- a tax-and-spend liberal. But Harsdorf’s claim that Moore -- her opponent in the Aug. 9 recall election -- stands against all tax limits is a broader line of attack. So we decided to take a look. When we asked Harsdorf to back her claim, her campaign made it clear it is using Moore’s union leader background as a basis for the attack. A high-school English and drama teacher, Moore was president or vice-president of her local union in Ellsworth from 1999 to 2004. She was also deeply involved in statewide politics as early as 2001 with the Wisconsin Education Association Council, the powerful state teachers union. Moore says she served from 2001-2003 on the WEAC committee that recommends lobbying positions for the organization. From 2003 until May 2011 she was on WEAC’s state board. Harsdorf points to Moore’s activism in WEAC and to WEAC’s opposition to three major efforts to rein in taxes since 2003: Constitutional tax-and-spending limits known as the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, or TABOR, in 2004. Longstanding revenue limits on schools. Property-tax freeze plans in the mid-2000s and in Gov. Scott Walker’s 2011-13 state budget. Harsdorf says that as a union leader, voting board member and member of WEAC’s legislative committee, Moore supported the union’s positions. Harsdorf also released an email from Moore -- written as a constituent to her senator -- that sheds some light on what Moore has said in her own words on revenue limits and TABOR. Let’s examine the evidence: The records show Harsdorf’s office received anti-TABOR contacts both from Moore personally and from Moore on behalf of WEAC. Moore also wrote to Harsdorf regarding the longstanding revenue caps on schools. In January 2005, Moore told Harsdorf those caps on schools DO NOT WORK. Schools took budget cuts, she wrote, and are desperate and dying. Moore has not disputed the authenticity of the documents. But Moore told us she shouldn’t be held to every WEAC position just because she was on the board. She described herself as moderate, a characterization Harsdorf disputes. But in an interview, Moore didn’t cite any area of disagreement with the union on tax limits -- and that’s the subject of the radio ad. Asked about the three big anti-tax proposals cited by Harsdorf, Moore was critical of the longstanding revenue caps on schools. She said they disproportionately affected fiscally responsible districts. She questioned the effectiveness of property-tax freezes, saying governments will find other ways to identify needed revenue, such as using fees. As for TABOR, she said legislators were eyeing the Colorado model, which she described as ineffective and detrimental to critical services. So just what is Moore’s position on taxes and limits to them? Moore pointed to her opposition to two particular tax increases in Walker’s budget, citing it as evidence that she does support a limit on some taxes. Moore was talking about Walker’s actions on tax credits that limit or eliminate the income-tax liability of low-income homeowners, renters and working families. The budget reduced those tax credits (earned income credit and the Homestead credit) by about $69.8 million over two years. Moore says she wants Wisconsin to get away from tax shifting, but has no interest in raising taxes on anyone. She said she is concerned tax burdens are tilted toward the average person and away from corporations. She opposed the corporate tax breaks Walker put in the budget. Moore also claims the budget cut $1.6 billion in funding from local schools. We fact-checked that number, used by Rep. Jennifer Shilling, D-La Crosse, and gave it a Barely True because it was based on a Democratic plan in 2009 to ease up on limits that dictate how much schools can raise in property taxes in 2011-13. Let’s review. In a radio ad, Harsdorf contrasts her vote for a budget with a property-tax freeze with the record of her opponent, saying Moore opposes any limit on taxes. This is one of those cases where a candidate has some facts on her side but overplays the hand. Moore has objected to several high-profile tax restraint efforts over the years, either personally and/or in her role as a union leader. But Harsdorf does not limit her statement to those measures -- she makes a leap with language that states Moore opposes any tax limits, period. During the campaign, Moore has publicly supported limiting the income-tax liability of working families, the elderly and others. In the past, we’d have called the statement Barely True, but the Truth-O-Meter becomes a little easier to read today as the PolitiFact network has a new title for the old definition: Mostly False. Editor's note: This statement was rated Barely True when it was published. On July 27, 2011, we changed the name for the rating to Mostly False. (en)
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