the great R. Crumb

A little help here?

It’s us taxpayers who are marginalized.

A question for our platinum subscribers: which alder, school board member, county supervisor, or state legislator here in greater Madison WI campaigned for and serves as a friend of the taxpayer?

We can’t think of a single one, either. 

Most of our elected officials vow to represent “marginalized communities,” which, by the evidence, should include taxpayers but do not. Give our out-state Republican state legislators some credit. They cut a deal with the Democrat Gov. Tony Evers to return $1.8 billion of the state’s $2.4 billion surplus, some of it directly to taxpayers in the form of $600 rebate checks to joint filers, about $315 million for special ed, and $300 million to offset K-12 school taxes; translates to $25 million to the Madison school district where property tax payers are groaning under the weight of a $607 million school spending referendum.

The teachers union candidate for governor, State Sen. Kelda Roys (D-Madison) complains that returning money to the taxpayer is “the height of irresponsibility.” State Rep. Francesa Hong, a Madison Democrat/socialist, calls it A payday loan.” No, young lady, we loaned it to you; now we want it back. 

In our NextDoor neighborhood feed, Mary in Arbor Hills wondered “why the state doesn’t release a larger portion of the billion dollar plus surplus to help with tax relief? …  Kinda bites when people are seeing 19% property tax increases.”

“My property taxes went up 26% last year,” says another neighbor named Scott. “How is that craziness sustainable?” (A Democrat buzz word.)

→ Two Senate Republicans and all 15 Democrats in 33-member Senate said to oppose the deal. No vote as of 7:43 p.m 05-13-26.

Meanwhile, Dane County wants to buy 165 acres of land along the Yahara River south of McFarland for $6.4 million to give away to the Ho-Chunk Nation. The same Dane County government facing a $15 million structural deficit.

Blaska’s Bottom Line: We call that reparations, poorly disguised. The state’s direct refunds are welcome but it’s a one-time bailout. State Sen. Steve Nass contends the State of Wisconsin is itself facing a $500+ million structural deficit. We say again, the problem is not insufficient funds but SPENDING!

Republican governor candidate Tom Tiffany notes points out that Tony Evers enabled school districts to jack up spending by $325 per pupil every year — for 400 years (!!!) Multiply that by the district’s 27,000 students, now multiply that by just 10 years.

What did you get?

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3 responses to “A little help here?”

  1. Clark Kent Avatar

    As long as the teachers union exist there will always be tax increases. Every politician fears them, they control the ballet boxes. The only they don’t care to control is giving our kids a good education

  2. richard V Lesiak Avatar

    You’re not getting back anything. Like everyone else they have bills to pay, fuel to buy, lights to keep on, etc. Uline just suspended construction because the economy sucks. Beaver Dam needs help now that the water is contaminated. Roads to fix after the gas tax is gone. INFLATION from the BBB giveaways. Evers needs to put up a statue of himself and build s ballroom. That seems to shut everyone up. You republicans are in charge here. They have given you nothing, yet you demand the Democrats save your asses. AGAIN!

  3. Gus Avatar
    Gus

    Super majorities of active voters in Madison reliably elect and re-elect school board members endorsed by MTI – the very union they are supposed to be negotiating with on the public’s behalf while figuring out a reasonable budget. I understand times are tough and I support the idea of public education generally. But when every seat is a safe seat for the union’s incumbents, there’s just no cure for this level of invincible, defiant, grinning and drooling self-sabotage by 80% or more of us.

    If very many local taxpayers are upset with this conflict of interest, how did they vote in the last election? Did they vote? Do they pay any attention at all to local politics? Where to start as an activist against such a self-satisfied machine?

    I have other reasons to be happy living here, and for that privilege I guess I’m paying ground rent to the government on top of my mortgage. Could be worse. I could be a real renter with no equity stake. But since I’m not wealthy, the issue may someday be forced. And Madison will be two voters safer for the well-heeled radicals who rule it while talking about affordability as though its an issue they care about, much less understand.

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