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INVEST IN WASHINGTON NOW PRESS RELEASE

  • STATEMENT: SCOTUS Declines to Hear Lawsuit To Take Away $900 Million/Year From Kids, Education and Give It To Washington’s Mega-Rich

    Contact: alex@percussionstrategic.com
    504-858-7209
    Capital Gains Lawsuit Resources

    Olympia, WA: Invest in Washington Now, a non-profit organization fighting for a more fair tax code in Washington state, issued the following statement regarding the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear an appeal to overturn Washington state’s capital gains tax on the mega-rich. 

    Treasure Mackley, Executive Director of Invest in WA Now:

    “The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision today was a huge victory for Washington kids and families. It preserved $900 million a year to support Washington’s child care and education programs, far more than was initially projected to be collected from this tax. This decision could not have come at a more critical time as school districts across the state are facing funding shortfalls. 

    After spending years falsely claiming that the capital gains tax is an income tax, and losing that argument again and again, they made another desperate attempt based on a dubious legal theory which forced them to admit that it’s an excise tax.

    Polls show Washingtonians strongly support making the wealthiest pay what they truly owe in taxes for services all of us depend on. When the wealthy pay what they owe, just like the rest of us, our communities are stronger. Only when we have a fair tax code can we undo decades of disinvestment in education that hurts families, communities, and small businesses and disproportionately impacts BIPOC children.” 

    The capital gains tax increases funding for the Education Legacy Trust Account, which supports child care, pre-schools, special education, and community and technical colleges; it also funds the Common School Construction Account, which helps with renovating, repairing, and building schools.

    Last year the Washington Supreme Court overturned a Douglas County judge’s earlier ruling in Quinn v Washington, a case brought by a small handful of ultra-millionaires. The 7% capital gains tax on stock sales’ extraordinary profits exceeding $250,000 annually does not apply to real estate, retirement accounts like IRAs, family-owned small businesses, and farms, among other things. It impacts just the wealthiest among us; only 0.2% of Washingtonian taxpayers will see enough profits to pay this tax. 

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