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You are living on money Tim Holden didn’t want you to have and doesn’t want you to keep.
In 1993, freshman congressman Tim Holden voted for the Clinton tax increase, at the time the largest tax increase in American history. In 2001 he voted against the tax rate reductions to the rates you and your family are paying today, and, in January 2008, Tim Holden told the Harrisburg Patriot News that he will vote to allow those rates to expire in 2010. Expiration of the current rates would set the new American record for tax increases.
What does that mean to you and to your family, neighbors, co-workers and friends? Check it out:
Can You Find Yourself or Your Family on this List?
The Holden/Clinton tax rates are the ones Tim Holden voted for in 1993 and wants to restore.
Today’s tax rates are the rates which Tim Holden voted against in 2001 and has promised to allow to expire, restoring the old rates.
Taxes Under Holden/Clinton VS Taxes Today
Holden/Clinton:
Today: |
Single making 30k - tax $8,400
Single making 30k - tax $4,500 |
Holden/Clinton:
Today: |
Single making 50k - tax $14,000
Single making 50k - tax $12,500 |
Holden/Clinton:
Today: |
Single making 75k - tax $23,250
Single making 75k - tax $18,750 |
Holden/Clinton:
Today: |
Married making 60k - tax $16,800
Married making 60k - tax $9,000 |
Holden/Clinton:
Today: |
Married making 75k - tax $21,000
Married making 75k - tax $18,750 |
Holden/Clinton:
Today: |
Married making 125k - tax $38,750
Married making 125k - tax $31,250 |
Remember, you’ve had these rates for eight years. Tim Holden doesn’t believe you should be able to keep your money in your own pocket.
If you pay taxes or buy groceries, you cannot afford Tim Holden!
Because he voted for the Democrats’ 2009 Budget Resolution, Tim Holden voted to raise taxes on everyone earning $32K per year, or more. The resolution assumes the expiration of the 2001 tax rate reductions on income. Of course, Holden and the Democrats claim that voting for a budget resolution is not a "tax vote.
We beg to differ. Holden and his party in Congress have made their intentions very clear. Your taxes will go up.
And, if you were one of the five million American taxpayers who fell off the tax rolls in 2001, be prepared to go back on.
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