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    Poll: Millionaire tax popular, spending cuts too

    Poll: Millionaire tax popular, but people prefer spending cuts to tax hikes to cut deficits

    Fantasy Finance

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Most people like President Barack Obama's proposal to make millionaires pay a significant share of their incomes in taxes. Yet they'd still rather cut spending than boost taxes to balance the federal budget, an Associated Press-GfK poll shows, giving Republicans an edge over Democrats in their core ideological dispute over the nation's fiscal ills.

    The survey suggests that while Obama's election-year tax plan targeting people making at least $1 million a year has won broad support, it has done little to shift people's basic views in the long-running partisan war over how best to tame budget deficits that lately have exceeded $1 trillion annually.

    "Everybody should be called to sacrifice. They should be in the pot with the rest of us," Mike Whittles, 62, a Republican and retired police officer from Point Pleasant, N.J., said of his support for Obama's tax proposal for the wealthy. But Whittles said he still prefers cutting government spending over raising taxes because of federal waste and what he calls "too many rules, too many regulations."

    Sixty-five percent of the people in the AP-GfK poll favor Obama's plan to require people making $1 million or more pay taxes equal to at least 30 percent of their income. Just 26 percent opposed Obama's idea.

    Yet by 56 percent to 31 percent, more embraced cuts in government services than higher taxes as the best medicine for the budget, according to the survey, which was conducted Feb. 16 to 20. That response has changed only modestly since it was first asked in the AP-GfK poll last March. The question on Obama's tax on the rich was not asked previously.

    The poll showed that overall, more people have a positive view of Democrats than Republicans, a ray of hope for Obama and his fellow Democrats with the approach of November's presidential and congressional elections. Fifty-four percent in the poll gave Democrats favorable ratings compared to 46 percent for Republicans, similar to results in January 2011, at the start of the newly elected Congress in which Republicans have run the House and Democrats wield a slender Senate majority.

    Though embraced by congressional Democrats, Obama's proposal on taxing millionaires more has virtually no chance of passage by Congress in the political heat of this year's campaigns. But it stands as a rallying cry for Democrats — about 9 in 10 of whom supported the plan in the poll — and it contrasts with proposals by the remaining major GOP presidential candidates, who would lower the current 35 percent top income tax rate.

    Obama has spent months touting his plan, nicknamed the Buffett rule after Warren Buffett, the billionaire who has complained that the rich don't pay enough taxes and that his own tax rate has been lower than his secretary's. The wealthy Mitt Romney, a leading GOP presidential contender, has released tax returns showing he paid a rate of around 15 percent the past two years.

    Illustrating the wide acceptance for Obama's tax proposal for the rich, the poll showed it was supported by nearly two-thirds of independents and 4 in 10 Republicans. It also won backing from 6 in 10 whites and half of conservatives, two groups that traditionally are more likely to support the GOP, as well as by 6 in 10 people earning at least $100,000 a year.

    Not everyone supports the idea.

    "If their money goes to taxes, how will they afford more employees, better equipment, better vehicles?" said Republican Cheryl Mickler, 31, of Hope Mills, N.C.

    As for the differing strategies for deficit reduction, more than three-fourths of Republicans and the largest share of independents preferred cutting government services. Democrats leaned toward tax increases, but by a narrower 49 percent to 38 percent.

    Republicans have an 8 percentage point advantage over Democrats in the public's trust for handling budget deficits, essentially unchanged in recent months.

    The GOP has the same edge for protecting the country, an issue it usually dominates. Peoples' trust in the two parties is about even for handling the economy, taxes and job creation.

    Congress continues to receive dismal reviews from voters. Just 19 percent approve of the job Congress is doing, virtually unchanged from last December. That's not far from Congress' worst-ever approval rate in the brief history of the AP-GfK poll of 12 percent last August, shortly after Obama and lawmakers resolved a stubborn standoff over raising the debt limit.

    "We put them there to do their job and they're not doing their job," said Gary Witalison, 54, a residential painter in Fish Creek, Wis. "They're not working things out. Work together."

    The AP-GfK poll was conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications and involved cell phone and landline interviews with 1,000 randomly chosen adults. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.1 percentage points.

    ___

    AP Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

    ___

    Online:

    http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com

     

    53 comments

    • Patrick K  •  2 months ago
      Make the USA like everywhere else we are competing against if you dont work you dont eat . No welfare no unemployment no healthcare everyone is on his/her own pay your own way .
      • Jim 2 months ago
        The problem, Pat, is that the places we compete with are usually socialist democracies where the governments are giving many 'freebees" which spreads the idea that..."why work to achieve anything since the government will give away my successes to those who who don't want to work as hard."
    • eagle lake  •  Jackson, Mississippi  •  3 months ago
      Taxes are part of the problem spending is the problem. Its simple math, the more you feed a pig the bigger he grows. Our pig has grown to big to feed. Its time for a diet.
    • Bert  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  3 months ago
      The latest poll to come out today says the vast majority do not believe we should tax the rich more. It is clear they pay their fair share. You cannot dispute that and we as americans need to be fair and look elsewhere for tax revenue and spending cuts.
    • Bill  •  3 months ago
      Hollywood gets 8 billion per year in tax breaks - you liberal rats - TALK ABOUT REDUCING THEM
    • SCARFACE  •  Rockford, Illinois  •  3 months ago
      3.8% Real Estate Sales Tax goes into effect next year, buried in the Health Care Bill

      This will hurt the Middle Class the most
      • the General 3 months ago
        Scarface you're a freaking idiot, the 3.8 tax is for people making over 250,000 and sell there house for a 250,000 gain , does not include many middle cl#$%$ as far as I know , you should think with your head not you #$%$ when you write a ressponse you know nothing about, must a typical repug.
      • Jim 2 months ago
        General, go check your facts...you are wrong!
      • John S 2 months ago
        and $250K a year is UPPER middle class.. you sad excuse for a human.
    • boo  •  3 months ago
      obama bankrupt the middle class,the 50 per cent pay no tax, after he taxes millionairs, they will pull thier money out of the country, obama the socialist liar will have his way greece
    • Jimmy  •  3 months ago
      This guy has fleeced the American people. Of course it wasn't very hard, peole are basically stupid, and: "Vote Democrat, it beats working for a living" is very popular in the inner cities and hispanic communities. It's Obamas hole card. Class-warfare. Keep telling the slaves were just going to hit up the millionaires and billionaires. Yeah baby! I'm in my third year of unemploment. It's like a dream. I don't do anything, and I keep getting all this cash! Rock on Barrack!
      • Robyn 3 months ago
        You are so right!
      • Douglas 3 months ago
        More GOP logic. Goofs.
      • Jim 2 months ago
        Doug, get your head out of your #$%$ so you can see the light !
    • charles  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
      They already pay the largest percentage of taxes. The 1% and the 5% pay almost ALL our collected taxes. That is quite enough. Get the facts straight instead of writing about an agenda of class warefare.
      Never in my 60 years on this planet have I seen a Gov't start class warefare. Envy is NOT the answer. What about the 46% who pay NO TAX at all ? That certainly is not doing ones fair share.
      If the top earners go away where will the money come from ? Not from the takers that is for sure.
      Class warefare only creates envy and anger. Not a country that hangs together. Everyone except the very poor should pay something it is only fair.
      getting tired of these articles with agenda. Tell the WHOLE story. Your continued agenda is exposed and we are NOT buying it any longer.

      charles

      charles
      • Jim 2 months ago
        Here's the real number , Charles,...the top 1% are paying 37% of the income taxes...now that's more than fair in my view.
    • Independent Voter  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
      Point, Many Millionaires own corporations, if they get hit with higher taxes, no money to hire new workers. You can hate the wealthy all you want and you can make them pay higher taxes, but that still will not get you a job.
    • joe  •  3 months ago
      Wow, what a shock! You mean all these non millionaires think it's OK for the rich to pay more taxes?! Who would have thought it? How about we change the question - just ask those making over $250,000 OR ask it this way: do you support raising taxes on the rich by 15%, and raising your taxes by 2%? That poll that the divider in cheif sites is worthless except that it divides the country further, just what he wants. He can't run on his record, so he'll do whatever he can to gain re-election.
    • ScreamingEagle920  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  3 months ago
      I love how they say Romney's tax rate is "around 15%." Try more like "around 13%." We are becoming an anemic society. This loss we all feel has caused us to fight amongst ourselves like a modern day cyber-civil war. All the while we have Corporations running rampant, spending far more money on getting politicians elected than they do on the police force that protects them from thieves, the roads which carries their goods, the fire department that protects their goods from fire, the public education system that provides a large number of semi-educated to educated individuals to work for them, or the cummunity that provides all of these services.

      People say "the Government should pay their fair share." I say the Corporations and millionaires should pay their fair share so we, the government, doesn't have to. The Government is supposed to be "by the people FOR the people." It's easy to forget that when you have copious amounts of money being spent trying to keep you distracted away from what is making them (corporations and millionaires) even more money. Unless you are one of around 3 million people, this message applies to you. If you are one of those 3 million people (out of 313 million people in the United States,) stop being so greedy and pay your fair share like you used to.
      • Robyn 3 months ago
        You are so misinformed. Romney paid 35% on all income, then invested some of what was left. As a smart investor, he made money off of those investments and was taxes 15% for that! Quit spouting liberal talking points and do some homework!
      • ScreamingEagle920 3 months ago
        Wrong...Your going very very deep into semantics here. How do you know that Romney paid 35%? I don't because he only released his latest tax year in which he made somewhere in the ballpark of 45 million dollars, all of which coming from investments, or his income for that tax year. This isn't a liberal talking point but rather common sence. I never said it was Romney's fault, because it isn't. It is a broken system when the millionaire investing his money is paying less in taxes (percentage-wise) than the person actually making the product. We can split hairs here over a small shred of my overall message, or you can realize you are proving my overall message through the words you write. We can't even agree that when someone makes money off of the money they have, it's new income. If you want to get really technical Romeny paid 13.9% of his total income for 2010-2011 in taxes. I did my homework...thats what makes me "liberal" in your eyes.
      • Independent Voter 3 months ago
        Do not leave Obama out like he is not getting millions from corporations.
    • Dennis Spillman  •  East Bend, North Carolina  •  3 months ago
      Government doesn't need to shink,,,but ALL government paid people pay needs to shrink.
    • bart  •  3 months ago
      Great poll. Do people want to tax some one else? YES!!! Do you want some evil rich guy to pay your bills? YES!!! Wow, who would have guessed that.
    • Patrick K  •  2 months ago
      MILLIONAIRE TAX POPULAR DO TO JEALOUSY OF THE HAVE NOTS ! ILLOGICAL AND STUPID BE NICE TO THE RICH THEY CONTROL YOUR JOBS .
    • Beads Underfoot  •  3 months ago
      Zeus, I wish they would poll me
    • stan  •  Rosenberg, Texas  •  3 months ago
      The income tax was begun with those making over 1 million per year. Look where it wound up.
    • Mike  •  3 months ago
      The majority of who? So let me get this straight, if you're successful, you should pay the majority of your income in taxes? What the hell kind of #$%$ plan is this? And who is the "majority" of people? Not me.Only under Obama does it become a crime to be successful. We need to get this ball-less, not take a stand on any issue, fool out of office. The economy would probably be humming along if we didn't have this idiot threatening to sue every individual or corporation that dares to make a profit.
    • D  •  Pleasanton, California  •  3 months ago
      What is that saying again? Something like any idea that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.
    • Sean  •  Bellevue, Washington  •  3 months ago
      Classs war is effective, there is no concept of us anymore. half pay some taxes, half dont, that doesnt sem fair. Our country is done. "The problem with socialism is that you run out of other peoples money" Margaret Thatchers best quote!
    • Jim53  •  3 months ago
      Both the millionaires tax and the cuts sound great, until you start the cutting. As soon as you get specific and say you want to cut ... whatever there is a support group that insists the it is the most important program on the planet. Next comes the number of jobs that will be lost if you cut these programs which would increase unemployment. By the way, I don't have the answer, but it doesn't seem any of the politicians out there will say what specifically they will do and to what effect.

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