Deeds would sign tax-increase bill

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Democratic gubernatorial candidate R. Creigh Deeds said yesterday that if the General Assembly passes a bipartisan bill that includes a tax increase to fund Virginia's transportation needs, he will sign it.

But the state senator from Bath County said during an online chat at the Richmond Times-Dispatch that he would not sign a transportation bill that took money from education or other "general fund priorities" to finance the fix.

"People can look at my record and know that I'm willing to make tough choices," Deeds said during a 30-minute conversation that also touched on abortion, firearms legislation and President Barack Obama's impact on the Virginia election.

In 2008, Deeds voted to support a statewide transportation plan that included an increase in Virginia's gas tax. The plan failed to clear the House of Delegates.

Yesterday he was asked:

"If you're governor and you get a bill that funds transportation in some form of either general or non-general fund tax increase, will you sign it?"

Deeds said he is committed to working with the next General Assembly to "get past the obstructionist viewpoints that have blocked progress on the issue" and build consensus "around a series of ideas that allow us to fund transportation. And yes, I will sign that bill.

"What I will not do is take money away from existing general fund priorities," Deeds added. "My opponent has released a plan that takes $5.4 billion, essentially out of education, over the next 10 years. You won't see me with that kind of approach. Democrats and Republicans alike have said that kind of approach is dead on arrival."

Republican candidate Bob McDonnell, a former state attorney general, has proposed a dozen mechanisms to fund transportation, including privatization of Alcoholic Beverage Control stores and placing tolls on Interstates 85 and 95 to be paid by drivers entering Virginia from North Carolina. McDonnell says he opposes tax increases to fund transportation.

"I'll sign a bill that funds transportation," Deeds said. "I won't take money away from existing priorities. I won't take money away from education."

Deeds said his campaign "is not about social issues." But he sought to further flesh out the distinctions between his pro-abortion-rights stance and McDonnell's anti-abortion position, saying it reflects their different priorities. He attacked McDonnell's record as a member of the House of Delegates of pushing legislation that would have placed greater restrictions on access to emergency birth control.

"My opponent . . . introduced 35 bills during his 14 years in the legislature to restrict a woman's right to choose. Not only that -- on the issue of choice, on the issue of birth control there's a huge divide between us. He voted to restrict birth-control availability on college campuses," Deeds said.

"I think our records are very clear. I've been in the legislature 18 years. During those 18 years I've proven that I'm the one that trusts Virginia's women to make those decisions, consulting whoever they believe they need to consult with."

A cornerstone of Deeds' campaign has been to align himself with the legacies of former Gov. Mark R. Warner and current Gov. Timothy M. Kaine. But Deeds indicated that he would sign gun legislation that Kaine vetoed during the 2009 assembly session.

Deeds said he would sign a bill that would allow holders of concealed-weapons permits to bring concealed weapons into eating and drinking establishments, as long as the permit holders are prohibited from drinking alcohol in such situations.

He also said he would sign a bill repealing the law that restricts purchasers to buying one handgun a month, saying that studies have shown "it did not do much to slow the flow of firearms from Virginia." McDonnell holds the same position on both gun issues.

The one-gun-per-month law was a highlight of the administration of then-Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, the nation's first elected black governor. Wilder, a Democrat, has not said whom he will support in the general election.

Deeds lauded Wilder's accomplishments and service and said he would be "honored" to have Wilder's support.

The candidate also said that although he might not fully agree with all of Obama's policies, campaigning with the president will help more than hurt his chances in November.

"I think, in general, the president will be a big support, a big help for me," said Deeds, calling Obama "a once-in-a-lifetime leader."

Recent polls placed Deeds anywhere from 8 to 15 percentage points behind McDonnell.

"It's August -- there aren't a lot of people focused on this election," Deeds said.

"Politics is like life. . . . Be assured we've already planned our work and we're going to be working our plan in this campaign. I'm confident we're going to win and we're going to lead Virginia forward."

Readers were able to submit questions for Deeds on TimesDispatch.com and NBC12.com. Ryan Nobles, the station's political reporter and blogger, also wrote about the online chat in his Decision Virginia blog.



Contact Jim Nolan at (804) 649-6061 or .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by Roddy on August 15, 2009 at 10:22 am

It is atonishing that a ploiiticians answer to everything is more taxes. What happened to cost savings, efficencies in the workplace, and God forbid, cutbacks. Our government beauracracy needs to be fixed, the defined benefit plans all government workers need to be modified (every private company has changed it as it has bankrupted many). I can never support any candidate that wants to increase taxes. We need to get this message across somehow, that the people need more for themselves and less for government.

Flag Comment Posted by dubiousthoughts on August 14, 2009 at 9:12 pm

Fred-

The demise of public education is related to white flight. Most white families move from Richmond when their kids hit middle school, or if they choose to remain in the city, they send their kids to private schools. Therefore, in this city, most of the kids are Black and poor.

Studies show that kids that come from impoverished backgrounds have a harder time achieving. Coming to school hungry, tired, or living in homes where family is drug addicted, alcoholics, unemployed, or victims of any other dire circumstance is not a recipe for success.

Before Richond middle and high schools improve, society has to improve.

Whether you feel that is worthy of your tax dollar is up to you.

Flag Comment Posted by dubiousthoughts on August 14, 2009 at 9:01 pm

citycynic -

You obviously don’t know the real world we live in today. I am sure you believe in the old line “if you work hard you can be anything you want”. For a select few, that is true. For the rest of us, there is a ceiling.

I work in the corporate world, and although I am paid well, it is nowhere close to what I deserve. Three people used to handle my role. I am supposed to “suck it up”, and be thankful my job is still being done in the USA. I am certain that in a few years there will be 4 people from India or China performing my role for a 1/2 of my salary. It is just a matter of time. Maybe you do a unique job that cannot be outsourced. If you do, be thankful while it lasts.

Coprorations do not want to give their employees crap. The do so to retain talent until they have a cheaper option. Workers are a cost, the first to go when profit is not being met. If you don’t understand that, you are not in tune with the modern world and the global economy.

You are one who always dishes out negativity, but what solutions do you offer? I think you just undermine Obama for a more insidious reason, even against your own self interests.

Flag Comment Posted by mikecoool on August 14, 2009 at 6:30 pm

If he’s a democrat he will raise taxes, that’s a no brainer.

Flag Comment Posted by Fred on August 14, 2009 at 4:58 pm

LittleDavid…my point was that I’m not sure that fuel taxes go exclusively for roads, however that may be the case, and as my previous posts states I am all for it. If you and I and everyone else pays taxes for roads, it should go exclusively for the roads. I have some problems with toll roads, and I absolutely can understand the trucking industry having a problem. the point I am making is that people should pay for services they use, be willing to pay something for the common good, and be vocal and unwilling to allow politicians to tax and spend for pet projects and special interests, this country can no longer afford it.

Flag Comment Posted by jerry78linda on August 14, 2009 at 4:47 pm

dubious - I find it amazing that city knows you so well to apply such name calling or even comment on your job performance.  City must have magic powers we are unaware of.  I hope you don’t take his offensive posting to heart.

I agree with your posting.  I believe the retort you received was strictly because you disagreed with city.  Evidently that causes a rile.

Flag Comment Posted by LittleDavid on August 14, 2009 at 4:38 pm

Fred,

I think you need to check your references.  I can only speak from experience.  I do not know where your references come from, but I will argue with those references if need be.

My experience is that while many states attempt to unconstitutionally tax interstate trucking traffic to pay for domestic expenses Virginia is not one of them.  I can not attempt to prove this without writing a book or at least running into character limits on how long a comment can be.  Please trust me when I state that the trucking industry understands that Virginia does not rip us off.  In comparison to most states, we get our moneys worth out of the Commonwealth.

Please understand that the trucking industry has a problem with toll roads.  We want every dime we pay going into asphalt.  With toll roads, one third of the money goes into the payroll to collect the tolls.  We want efficiency not waste.

Flag Comment Posted by citycynic on August 14, 2009 at 4:34 pm

wow dubiousthoughts - did you even ready my post? I never said no taxes - I said increasing them at every turn is not the answer.

And yes, I do believe employers want to give their employees a raise. They do so in order to retain good talent - a concept you obviouisly can’t grasp because you have some kind of bone to pick with your employer over not getting an increase (which you probably don’t deserve because your performance is probably marginal at best). 

Finally, I’ve done my research. Not that I expect you to know or care as evidenced by your reply - you were too busy sipping the sociailist koolaid and “spouting” Obama’s healthcare mantra.

Flag Comment Posted by Fred on August 14, 2009 at 4:00 pm

LittleDavid…check your references on where the fuel tax REALLY goes, the lottery was supposed to be used for school funding but was thrown into the general fund for all uses. I firmly believe that fuel taxes, registration taxes etc. should go exclusively for roads, but sadly they don’t, much is spent on far less worthy activities.

Flag Comment Posted by Fred on August 14, 2009 at 3:54 pm

dubiousthoughts…I absolutely agree with your point that we are all in this together, and that people should contribute by paying taxes for the good of the general welfare of the city, county, country etc. I used the education example because it sums up the problem very well. If someone is paying taxes for schools and the Govt. run schools are lousy, they are NOT GETTING THEIR MONEY’S WORTH for the taxes they pay. They should be able to send their child to the school that best fits their, and their child’s needs. If the Govt. schools are doing a good job, then the taxpayer IS GETTING THEIR MONEY’S WORTH. This not only applies to schools but to everything the Govt. taxes us for, the question is the govt. providing good quality services that people will use and pay taxes for, or are they wasting our money?

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