|
Poll: Americans Discount Tax Cuts
By WILL LESTER,
The Associated
Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - Four in
five Americans in an Associated Press poll say they feel that tax cuts
generally benefit someone else, a sentiment they hold even after 86 million
tax rebate checks worth almost $40 billion were mailed last year by the Bush
administration.
A substantial majority, 72 percent,
also said they would vote for a congressional candidate who supports a
balanced budget over one who prefers tax cuts, according to the poll
conducted for the AP by ICR of Media, Pa., a few weeks before the
annual mid-April deadline for filing taxes.
"I don't think tax cuts are
helping any of us very much," said Betty Perry, a 75-year-old retiree
from Spokane, Wash. "I don't know if we ever see them."
The number who said tax cuts
generally benefit somebody else, 80 percent, is higher than the 61 percent
who said in a September 2000 survey that they felt that way about
"targeted tax cuts."
During the presidential campaign,
George W. Bush repeatedly said tax cuts should include everyone, and the
administration worked hard to draw the public's attention to last year's
mailing of tax rebate checks.
The public also is decidedly more
sympathetic to congressional candidates who place a higher priority on
balancing the budget than they do on cutting taxes - with three-fourths
preferring the budget-balancers and only a fourth supporting the
tax-cutters.
"As the (baby) boomers get
toward their older years, Social Security and Medicare are going to become
more important to us," said Dave Tipple, 52, a graphic designer from
Columbus, Ohio. "If we keep deficit spending, it will put all that in
jeopardy."
Congressional leaders apparently
are aware of public sentiment on the issue. GOP leaders expressed worries
this winter about the reaction of voters in November if lawmakers do not
pass a balanced budget. Both parties are looking for approaches that would
balance the budget, while dealing with numerous spending pressures.
A year ago, a third of Americans
thought their taxes would not go down at all as a result of the tax cuts
proposed by President Bush. More than half say now their taxes will not go
down at all even after Congress passed tax cuts.
Half the Republicans say they
expect their taxes to go down, while a third of Democrats and about four in
10 independents feel that way.
Republicans were three times as
likely as Democrats - by 27 percent to 8 percent - to say tax cuts were
aimed more at them and not someone else. Just over one in 10 independents
felt that way.
"They're going in the right
direction if they're cutting taxes," said 42-year-old Monique Maddox,
an insurance agent from Cumming, Ga., who usually votes Republican. "If
it's a true tax cut, it would help people."
Lee Long, a 29-year-old highway
department worker from Sparta, Mo., said he wants politicians to strike a
balance between cutting taxes and balancing the budget.
"I think they've got to do
both," he said. "They've got to keep the budget in balance, but
they've got to help the people now and then."
Six in 10 expect to get a tax
refund this year, about the same number who expected one in AP polls in
recent years.
Additionally, just over half said
they were unwilling to give up deductions to simplify the tax system, while
a third were willing to give up some. About six in 10 Adults from ages 18 to
44 were willing to give up deductions, while just over four in 10 adults
over 45 were willing to make the trade-off.
"I would trade some deductions
if they gave me the option," said Tipple, the Ohio graphic designer.
"A flat tax would be the best thing that ever happened."
Despite efforts to give everyone a
stake in tax cuts, the public apparently still has doubts about who's
getting the most help, the poll suggests.
According to Christina Ledbetter, a
retiree from Franklin, N.C.:
"There always seems like there
is a loophole for people who really don't need the tax cut."
AP-NY-04-02-02 0737EST
|