|
Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: January 26, 2012

Sen. David Holt
Sen. Holt Introduces “Lincoln Amendment” to Empower
Taxpayers
Senator David
Holt, R-Oklahoma City, has introduced Senate Joint Resolution
75, which proposes an amendment to the Oklahoma Constitution that
would give local taxpayers or their elected representatives the
final approval before any local tax dollars are spent. If approved
by the Legislature, the amendment would appear on the November,
2012 ballot for consideration by the voters of Oklahoma. The proposal
is dubbed the “Lincoln Amendment” after the President
who declared that the American government was “by the people”
and “for the people.”
“This common sense amendment enshrines in our state’s
Constitution a basic premise of American democracy – that
our government is by the people and for the people, just as Lincoln
said at Gettysburg,” said Holt. “Oklahoma’s Constitution
already makes it very difficult to raise taxes, and that’s
a good thing. But every new tax starts with a new expense, and the
Oklahoma Constitution, remarkably, does not give taxpayers or their
local elected representatives the absolute power to spend tax dollars.
There are dozens of examples in recent years of local taxpayers
being forced to take on new financial obligations, not only without
the consent of either the taxpayers or their representatives, but
actually over their objections.”
Recently, Oklahoma was ranked the most anti-taxpayer state in the
entire southern United States by the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
This was primarily because in Oklahoma, the wishes of local taxpayers
and their elected representatives are routinely trumped when it
comes to spending tax dollars, causing local governments to take
on expenses they cannot afford, resulting in service cuts or requests
for more taxes. The Lincoln Amendment is a response that shifts
the power of the purse back where it belongs, to the taxpayers.
The Lincoln Amendment adds a new Section 26A to complement Article
X, Section 26 of the Oklahoma Constitution. Section 26 currently
provides for approval by the voters before a municipal government
may take on any indebtedness that exceeds income and revenue for
the then-current fiscal year. To add to this and other important
taxpayer protections in the Constitution, the new Section 26A requires
that the city council, the voters, or someone delegated by the city
council must expressly approve all expenses before they can be implemented.
This taxpayer protection adds no further burden to city operations,
but it ensures that all spending is ultimately accountable to the
taxpayers.
“Though the Lincoln Amendment presents an ideal that Oklahomans
may assume is as American as apple pie, the Oklahoma Constitution
currently provides no such protection,” said Holt. “This
common sense amendment is long overdue, and I will fight to ensure
that the voters are given the opportunity to consider it.”
For more information contact:
Senate Holt: (405) 521-5636

|