Bill Text: TX HCR27 | 2015-2016 | 84th Legislature | Introduced
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Urging the U.S. Congress to abolish the current income-based system of taxation and to enact a national retail sales tax, and urging repeal of the Sixteenth Amendment.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 2-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2015-05-06 - Committee report sent to Calendars [HCR27 Detail]
Download: Texas-2015-HCR27-Introduced.html
Bill Title: Urging the U.S. Congress to abolish the current income-based system of taxation and to enact a national retail sales tax, and urging repeal of the Sixteenth Amendment.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 2-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2015-05-06 - Committee report sent to Calendars [HCR27 Detail]
Download: Texas-2015-HCR27-Introduced.html
84R884 BPG-D | ||
By: Stephenson | H.C.R. No. 27 |
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WHEREAS, History has demonstrated that the levying of income | ||
taxes gives government too much power over citizens, and | ||
accordingly, the nation's founding fathers did not impose a federal | ||
income tax in the United States Constitution; and | ||
WHEREAS, The nation's current income tax system, established | ||
via the enactment of the Sixteenth Amendment to the United States | ||
Constitution, is unfair and inequitable, and it unnecessarily | ||
intrudes on the privacy and civil rights of U.S. citizens; it | ||
imposes unacceptable and needless administrative and compliance | ||
costs on individuals and businesses, and it requires individuals to | ||
prepare annual tax returns using many complicated forms, resulting | ||
in unintentional errors that are severely punished; in addition, it | ||
hides the true costs of government by embedding taxes in the costs | ||
of everything that Americans buy; compliance does not occur at | ||
adequate levels, which raises the tax burden on law-abiding | ||
citizens; and | ||
WHEREAS, Hindering economic growth, the current tax system | ||
diminishes the standard of living, impedes the international | ||
competitiveness of industry, and lowers productivity; it slows the | ||
capital formation necessary for real wages to steadily increase and | ||
reduces savings and investment by taxing the same income multiple | ||
times; moreover, it penalizes marriage and impedes upward social | ||
mobility; and | ||
WHEREAS, Federal payroll taxes, including social security | ||
and Medicare payroll taxes and self-employment taxes, destroy jobs | ||
by raising employment costs; these taxes lead to higher rates of | ||
unemployment and have a disproportionately adverse impact on | ||
lower-income Americans; and | ||
WHEREAS, Federal estate and gift taxes impose unacceptably | ||
high tax-planning costs on family-owned businesses and farms, and | ||
families are often forced to sell their holdings in order to pay | ||
them; furthermore, these taxes discourage capital formation and | ||
entrepreneurship, fostering the continued dominance of large | ||
enterprises over small, family-owned companies and farms; and | ||
WHEREAS, In The Federalist No.21, published in 1787, | ||
Alexander Hamilton wrote: "It is a signal advantage of taxes on | ||
articles of consumption, that they contain in their own nature a | ||
security against excess"; a broad-based national sales tax on goods | ||
and services purchased for final consumption would promote | ||
fairness, economic growth, and savings and investment; it would | ||
raise the standard of living and improve upward social mobility by | ||
enhancing productivity and international competitiveness and by | ||
reducing administrative burdens on the American taxpayer; at the | ||
same time, a national sales tax would respect the privacy interests | ||
and civil rights of taxpayers; such a tax would be similar in many | ||
respects to the sales and use taxes that are now authorized in 45 of | ||
the 50 states; and | ||
WHEREAS, Most of the practical experience in administering | ||
sales taxes is found at the state level; accordingly, a national | ||
retail sales tax could be efficiently implemented by fostering | ||
administration and collection of a federal sales tax at the state | ||
level, in return for a reasonable administration fee paid to the | ||
states; coordinating federal and state collection and enforcement | ||
efforts to the maximum extent possible would further contribute to | ||
the smooth transition to a national retail sales tax; while | ||
businesses would incur costs in collecting and remitting taxes, | ||
they would receive reasonable compensation for their efforts; and | ||
WHEREAS, In every respect, a national retail sales tax is | ||
more equitable and advantageous than the present system of relying | ||
on income taxes; now, therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the 84th Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
hereby urge the Congress of the United States to abolish the current | ||
income-based system of taxation, to enact a national retail sales | ||
tax, and to propose and submit to the states for ratification the | ||
repeal of the Sixteenth Amendment to the United States | ||
Constitution; and, be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official | ||
copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to | ||
the president of the Senate and the speaker of the House of | ||
Representatives of the United States Congress, and to all the | ||
members of the Texas delegation to Congress with the request that | ||
this resolution be entered in the Congressional Record as a | ||
memorial to the Congress of the United States of America. |