Wealthy Minnesotans and some corporations would see their taxes increase under a plan state House Democrats unveiled Monday, which would grant tax breaks to others and devote more money to schools and child care.
The state's financial outlook has vastly improved since a year ago, but leaders of the DFL-controlled House join Democratic Gov. Tim Walz in contending additional tax dollars are needed for education and working families.
"We're raising sustainable, progressive revenue in our tax bill to make sure that we can back up the commitments that we're making to students, and families and workers today," said House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, as Democrats released their tax plan for the next two years, along with spending proposals for education, workforce and other budget areas.
Republicans, who control the Senate, have drawn a firm line on taxes. As Senate leaders proposed their overall budget numbers last month, they said billions in incoming federal aid and a projected $1.6 billion surplus in the next two-year budget render tax increases unnecessary.
"Democrats' billion-dollar tax hike will hurt the very businesses who have struggled so much over the past year, and slow down hiring as our economy gets back on its feet. Fortunately, these tax hikes are dead on arrival in the Senate," Rep. Greg Davids, the Republican lead on the House Tax Committee, said in a statement.
Many elements in the House proposal match Walz's latest budget. The governor revised his budget in mid-March, scaling back nearly $1 billion of the tax increases he had outlined in January. But he maintained his push for a new fifth-tier income tax bracket, an idea that's also included in House Democrats' proposal.
A married couple making more than $1 million who file their taxes jointly, or a single person earning more than $500,000, would encounter a new 11.15% tax rate under the House bill, slightly higher than the 10.85% top rate in Walz's plan. House Democrats also aim to bring in tax revenue from corporations' profits that are being sheltered abroad.
Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-East Gull Lake, posted a video Monday saying the fifth-tier income tax bracket is "the last thing we need" and said it would hurt small business owners.