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  • 2018-06-22 (xsd:date)
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  • Scott Walker's big re-election tax cut tout: $8 billion during his time as Wisconsin governor (en)
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  • In May 2017, Gov. Scott Walker made a claim about tax cuts since he took office in 2011. He said the cuts that had been approved, and those that were proposed in his 2017-’19 state budget, would exceed $8 billion by the time the budget is done. We rated the statement True . Now the budget is done and Walker is making the claim without qualifications. For example, he declared on May 31, 2018, on Twitter : Since taking office, we have enacted more than $8 billion in cumulative tax relief. Campaigning for a third term in the November 2018 election, it’s a statement Walker will repeat. Let’s see if it’s right. More governor’s race fact checks: How Walker and the Democratic candidates for governor stack up on the Truth-O-Meter . The numbers The governor’s office provided us tallies from the State Budget Office. They show that through June 2019, when the current 2017-’19 state budget ends, the tax cuts will exceed $8.85 billion. We also went to a nonpartisan source, the state Legislative Fiscal Bureau, which did calculations in May 2018 and arrived at a slightly lower figure. The fiscal bureau told us it estimated the reduction in general fund tax revenues and property tax revenues, as a result of tax law changes enacted since 2011, at $8.47 billion: Income and franchise tax reductions $4.82 billion Property tax reductions $3.56 billion Other tax cuts $90 million Total tax reductions 2011 through mid-2019 $8.47 billion Democrats' reaction We asked the state Democratic Party about Walker’s claim. The party did not challenge the $8 billion tally, but criticized a number of Walker’s policies. Like us on Facebook . Follow us on Twitter: @PolitiFactWisc Among them: State tax cuts adopted since 2011 have disproportionately gone to Wisconsin residents with the highest incomes, according to an analysis by the nonprofit Wisconsin Budget Project. The manufacturing and agricultural tax credit gave an estimated $22 million in credits to 11 individuals who had an adjusted gross income of $30 million or more in 2017, according to the state fiscal bureau. Our rating Walker says: Since taking office, we have enacted more than $8 billion in cumulative tax relief. The state’s official nonpartisan budget scorekeeper puts the figure -- since Walker took office in 2011 and through the current budget that runs through mid-2019 -- at $8.47 billion. We rate Walker’s statement True. Share the Facts 2018-06-22 13:10:03 UTC PolitiFact 6 1 7 PolitiFact Rating: True Since taking office, we have enacted more than $8 billion in cumulative tax relief. Scott Walker Wisconsin governor, Republican https://twitter.com/GovWalker/status/1002248343576342528 On Twitter Thursday, May 31, 2018 2018-05-31 Read More info (en)
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