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Congressional Candidate Kirsten Engel on the Pandemic, Healthcare Challenges, the Border and More
tucsonweekly.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tucsonweekly.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Congressional Candidate Randy Friese on the ACA, the Border Wall, the Election Audit and More
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Early voter law changed before SCOTUS ruling
A new ruling upholding Arizona election laws comes as state lawmakers just changed one of the reasons the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to leave those statutes in place.
In concluding the ban on ballot harvesting does not violate the Voting Rights Act, the court cited how easy it is for Arizonans to cast early ballots, Justice Samuel Alito pointed out that, among other things, “any voters may ask to be sent an early ballot automatically in future elections.” That was true at the time the case was argued at the court in March.
By Howard Fischer
PHOENIX Gov. Doug Ducey on Wednesday signed legislation putting in place an immediate $1.3 billion tax cut, set to rise to $1.9 billion, that is designed largely to benefit the most wealthy.
The move comes as Ducey inked his approval to the $12.8 billion spending plan just ahead of the new fiscal year that begins Thursday morning. It also came as state lawmakers approved the last elements of the budget package for the new fiscal year after jettisoning provisions to vastly expand the number of children who could get vouchers of public dollars to attend private and parochial schools.
Arizona Senate votes to shield business owners from tax hike
JONATHAN J. COOPER, Associated Press
June 29, 2021
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PHOENIX (AP) Arizona Senate Republicans voted Tuesday to further shield some of the state s wealthiest taxpayers from a tax increase approved by voters last year to boost education funding.
If Republican Gov. Doug Ducey signs off as expected, income from estates, trusts and business profits won t be subject to a voter-approved 3.5% surcharge, reducing school funding by several hundred million dollars per year.
The move comes on the heels of last week s massive tax cut that directed most of the benefits to the wealthiest taxpayers. That plan lowered tax rates to 2.5% for most people and 4.5% for income affected by Proposition 208.
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