[GPCA Updates] Press Release: Greens to Gov Brown on Financial Crisis

Green Party of California Updates updates at cagreens.org
Mon Jan 31 17:43:36 PST 2011









Green Party warns Brown that, like Egypt, the "have not's" can only take so
much; Urge Governor to fix financial crisis by taxing the wealthy as they do
the rest of us

GREEN PARTY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS RELEASE

SACRAMENTO (Jan 31, 2011) - The Green Party of California warned Gov. Jerry
Brown today - minutes before he gives his "State of the State" address - to
not go down the same path as ex-Gov. Schwarzenegger by trying to solve
California's financial crisis on the backs of workers and the poor.

Like in Egypt, Californians can only take so much unemployment, out-of-sight
education costs and increasing disparity between the wealthy and the rest of
the population, Greens said.

"There is no reason California is in the financial state it's in, other than
the fact that our state government continues to practice prosperity for the
richest of the rich, and austerity for the rest of us. The richest 1% captured
a huge portion of economic growth in past years; they should get the austerity
now," said Laura Wells, a GPCA spokesperson and 2010 candidate for Governor.

"If California taxed them fairly, we would have enough money to improve
education, environment, equality, and economy. And, they would still be rich.
They would still have multiple houses, and private yachts, and private schools
and golf courses. Their assets would keep growing. They just wouldn't be
filthy rich, while so many are dirt poor today," Wells said.

"We need more justice in the tax system, rather than unfairness through
cutting education and basic services. A Green administration would start by
closing the gaping tax loophole in Prop 13 through a split-roll and making the
income tax more progressive at the very top. Why isn't this possibility even
part of the dialogue? " said Michael Feinstein, Green Party spokesperson and
former Mayor of Santa Monica.

"These are the kind of long-term, structural reforms needed to address our
structural deficit. Instead Gov. Brown is advocating extending temporary tax
increases for five years, leaving long-term uncertainty and missing a historic
opportunity for sustainable reform," Feinstein said.

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