Rick Jackson – He is for Real

Rick Jackson showed up in the Republican Georgia gubernatorial race like a tornado swooping into Southwest Georgia. I checked him out. He is for real.

You need to spend a little time and take a close look at this candidate. I have included the campaign introduction video (3 1/2 minutes) and Jackson’s first speech as a candidate (25 minutes)Take a few minutes to listen to him.

Let me share with you what I learned from listening to him and checking him out with people who know him. The title of this article sums it up best – he is for real.

It is not only what he says, but how he says it. I watched his speech and listened to him carefully. I saw a firm, resolute, calm strength and character that developed over years of testing and trials that most of us will never experience.

Rick Jackson grew up in the projects and foster homes. His life was influenced by living with a Christian family and later in the United Methodist Children’s Home.

An article in TwoTen Magazine from ten years ago told his story. When this article was written a decade ago, he was not running for anything. He did not need anything. He just had a committment to help those who had no voice, children in foster care.

That article told how, at five years old, he walked to Sunday School at a church in downtown Atlanta. Living in a foster home, he experienced a family praying before a meal. It was so foreign to him that he could not process the love and faith of that family.

In his first speech, he said that his company’s main cultural value is “Others First.” I checked the Best Places to Work website and found that 90% of his nearly 2500 employees said that it is a great place to work compared to 57% at a typical US based company.

At one point in the speech when he spoke of his addressing a senate committee about foster care, you could see the powerful conviction welling up in him. It caused him to pause for a moment to catch his composure. That kind of reaction cannot be manufactured. He summed up his Others First values:

“The system forgets the people who don’t have money, power, privilege or fame, not those who need it. Right then, I committed to do everything I could to help those without a voice, without a lobbyist, without a checkbook to make their voice heard.”

He did not have to say that he felt a calling to run for Governor. It was evident in his whole being as he spoke. He laid out his vision to make Georgia the the most affordable state in the nation.

His commitment is to freeze property taxes and slash the income tax by 50% in four years. In eight years he strives to eliminate the income tax all together.

He wants to freeze tuition, room and board for state higher education. He wants to tackle the cost of home ownership.

He addresses the “woke nonsense and complete insanity. “ He says that if Christianity cannot be taught then neither will this ideology find a place in Georgia’s public schools.

There won’t be any boys playing in girls sports or in the girls bathrooms and locker rooms. “There are two genders and they are God-given.” He went farther to say that anyone pushing this ideology will not be just stopped but will be held accountable.

He says that there will not be a stronger supporter of the 2nd amendment. From his own personal experience growing up, he is a passionate supporter of law enforcement. I like the way he said that he will make Georgia the worst place in the nation for criminals.

I went beyond what I could find in research and checked with some of those who know him. One commented, “I know of his genuine faith.”

Rick Jackson is for real. I will be proud to give him my vote and have him as my governor. Check him out and I believe you will too.

Subscribe to Don Cole.Com

FacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedintumblrmailFacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedintumblrmailby feather

I’m With Blake – Kill the State Income Tax

The legislature is in session, and this session brings calls for killing taxes. The House is looking at killing the homestead property tax and the Senate is looking to kill the state income tax.

Florida killed the state income tax years ago and now is looking to eliminate property taxes. We should aspire to both eventually. This article focuses on the state income tax.

Senator Blake Tillery, Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee is leading the charge to kill the tax. He was appointed to Chair the Special Committee to Eliminate the Income Tax. The Committee released its report as the General Assembly convened.

Bottom Line

The report begins with a bold “literally boldfaced, headline sized print” summary statement:

“We recommend making the first $50,000 for individuals and $100,000 for joint filers completely tax free beginning in 2027. We also recommend reducing the state income tax rate for all other families and businesses. These proposals completely eliminate the state income tax on 2/3 of all working Georgians while drastically reducing the tax burden on everyone else.”

As the Chairman, Blake Tillery wrote an editorial for the Atlanta Journal Constitution to support the bold plan. Underscoring the aggressive plan, Tillery wrote that the committee’s charge was not to debate whether or not eliminating the income tax was a good idea. The charge was “to figure out how to do it responsibility.”

Plenty of politicians make bold campaign promises about cutting taxes. Chairman Tillery and the committee did not want to just talk. Their proposal is like the old Nike shoe slogan, “Just do it.”

What this means is that on day one of the new tax year, 2/3 of Georgia families would see an immediate elimination of the state income tax. That means zero state income tax deductions from their take home pay. It also means that the business they work for has less compliance burden in withholding and sending taxes to the state Department of Revenue.

How We “Pay for It”

When I mention eliminating the state income tax to some of my friends, the first question out of their mouths is often, “how are you going to pay for it?” That question itself belies an understanding that taxes come from a source that belongs to the government rather than to the individual. (That’s an article for another day)

Some liberal think tanks put out horror talking points stating that the sales tax would have to be increased to 12% to make up the difference. The committee faced those kinds of misrepresentations in its second meeting.

The committee unanimously and on a bi-partisan basis approved a motion that, “any elimination of the income tax wouldn’t accompany new state taxes on groceries, property, or gas.”

So how could the state adjust to the loss of state income taxes that are eliminated for 2/3 of Georgians? We do it by continuing the bold, conservative, fiscal policies that have led to strong economic growth and record surpluses each year.

We also do it by eliminating special interest tax breaks. In his editorial Chairman Tillery noted that the complexities of income taxes are an invitation to carve-outs and special treatment for special interest groups. Who ultimately pays for these carve-outs? You do.

The committee report puts it this way, “when special interests pay less, everyone else pays more.” Eliminating the income tax for everyone focuses on the average Georgia family as the special interest that is really important.

Prioritize and Execute – Just Do It

The committee has done its work. For my policy wonk friends, you can read the full report here: Georgia Senate Special Committee on the Elimination of Georgia’s Income Tax Final Report and Recommendations

The committee has acted responsibly by holding four meetings across the state and receiving input from numerous sources. I am impressed that the 22 page report concludes with a one sentence recommendation,

“Pass legislation this year to eliminate Georgia’s personal income tax on the first $50,000 a year for single filers and $100,000 per year for married couples filing jointly, effective January 1, 2027.”

The recommendation is positvely blunt with action, timeliness, and impact:

“Pass legislation.”

“This year.”

“To eliminate.”

Time for talking is past. Now it is the time to act. Just do it.

Subscribe to Don Cole.Com

FacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedintumblrmailFacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedintumblrmailby feather