Massachusetts
Tax rebate math favors rich
The wealthy are more likely to profit essentially the most from tax rebates that would come as quickly as subsequent month.
What’s taking place: Massachusetts owes taxpayers $2.9 billion beneath the automated tax refund legislation, an obscure legislation final triggered in 1987 that returns surplus tax income to Bay Staters.
- Gov. Baker has stated he hopes to concern the funds within the type of rebates in November, moderately than ready for tax submitting season subsequent 12 months.
- The method bases tax funds on how a lot folks paid in taxes in 2021, that means the wealthy will get extra money again than low- and middle-income earners.
The most recent: An inner Division of Income doc obtained by Axios by means of a public information request estimated a variety in tax refund checks, from roughly $30 for low-income earners to $27,466 for these making $1 million or extra.
- Sure, however: The estimates are based mostly on 2020 tax returns, not 2021.
Why it issues: Progressive Democrats say the cash is not benefiting those that want it most, together with low-income earners whose tax funds take up an even bigger share of their earnings.
What they’re saying: “There is a disconnect between speeding these checks out the door, based mostly on arguments that persons are hurting and wish this cash as quickly as attainable on one hand, and alternatively, the checks disproportionately serving to those that want them the least,” says Phineas Baxandall, a senior analyst on the Massachusetts Price range and Coverage Heart.
- The legislation “in impact transfers to larger earnings households tax income paid by decrease earnings households,” MassBudget senior coverage analyst Jason Wright stated in a report titled “62F Credit Profit the Wealthy.”
- Low-income residents won’t obtain a 62F credit score if different low-income credit diminished the quantity of earnings tax they owed, in line with Wright.
The opposite facet: “[The 1987 law] was meant as a verify on limitless taxation and unsustainable spending,” Chip Ford, government director of Residents for Restricted Taxation, stated in a press release after the state auditor licensed the tax income estimates final month.
Actuality verify: The state hasn’t launched 2021-based estimates on how a lot folks ought to get again from the automated tax refund legislation. The estimates utilizing tax knowledge from earlier years supply a glimpse, however an incomplete one.
- The one method for taxpayers to see their projected automated tax refunds is to fill out the state’s refund estimator, utilizing particulars from their 2021 tax returns.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts among states suing to block executive order ending birthright citizenship
NORTHAMPTON, MA (WGGB/WSHM) — Massachusetts is now one of 18 states suing President Donald Trump’s administration over his plan to end birthright citizenship, which is when someone born on U.S. soil is considered an American citizen, even if their parents aren’t.
Birthright citizenship was part of an executive order that focused on immigration. As part of the order, the president also intends to send troops to the United States-Mexico border, end asylum access, and suspend the refugee program. Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell issued a statement and said: “President Trump thinks he can ignore the constitution and deny birthright citizenship from thousands of innocent children. It’s a cruel, egregious overstep of his authority. We’re suing to stop this unlawful plan in its tracks.”
Rev. Eric Cherry, interim minister of the Unitarian Society of Northampton and Florence, told Western Mass News these executive orders go against the history of his church. Despite these new orders, Cherry said his congregation will continue to uphold their moral values of treating those seeking asylum as neighbors. “Our religious tradition believes that people who are born in the United States are entitled to be citizens that was an important change that followed the abolition of slavery,” he said. “We will be a part of the wide diverse group of people who resist efforts to change that amendment to the constitution.”
Cherry is referencing the 14th Amendment. He also told us his church provided sanctuary to immigrants in the past. When asked what steps the church is willing to take going forward to protect immigrants under the new administration, Cherry said that’s contingent upon what happens in the days ahead. “Much will depend upon the shape of the unjust actions the federal government takes. We’re glad to know the leaders in the state and city are not going to support illegal and unjust efforts and we will find our ways to support our neighbors as well,” he explained.
Cherry told us his congregation will take tackle the issues that come from these executive orders one day at a time.
Copyright 2025. Western Mass News (WGGB/WSHM). All rights reserved.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts has to pay back over $2 billion to the federal government
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