One might live a lifetime without witnessing a political trouncing like the one voters delivered to Proposal 1 on May 5. The complex measure to annually devote $1.2 billion more for roads by raising taxes $2 billion didn’t just fail, it was vaporized in an historic 20-80 rout.
Some Prop 1 proponents say they now discern a new consensus to raise taxes to fix the roads, even though that is not the most obvious interpretation of their 60-point margin of defeat. While Prop 1’s failure may have made even a small tax increase more difficult, the Mackinac Center’s ideas remain untarnished by the blowout.
So what are the Mackinac Center’s road funding principles? We point to the free-market ideal — True North, if you will — and chart a path that leads there even when it’s not yet politically possible.
We have a way of patiently helping the politically impossible become politically inevitable, to borrow Milton Friedman’s phrase. Our two-decade march for right-to-work comes to mind.
Might a consensus now form around our approach to roads?
State House leaders recently introduced a plan that embraces most of these principles, even prioritizing future state revenue for roads so that they get more resources with no tax increase. If a final compromise does include a tax increase, we’ll be cheering in direct proportion to how much of the total road funding package comes from reprioritizing current spending. That would represent progress compared to the conventional mindset of seeking all the new road money from a tax hike. And it’s one step in the direction of True North.
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The Mackinac Center for Public Policy is a nonprofit research and educational institute that advances the principles of free markets and limited government. Through our research and education programs, we challenge government overreach and advocate for a free-market approach to public policy that frees people to realize their potential and dreams.
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