Author Topic: Blue and Red States Draw Farther Apart  (Read 22 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Online Elderberry

  • TBR Contributor
  • *****
  • Posts: 19,985
Blue and Red States Draw Farther Apart
« on: March 24, 2026, 06:58:17 am »
Powerline 3/22/2026

The sorting of America’s states into blue and red, with the one-way population transfers that have followed, is the biggest political and cultural story of this century. In the abstract, one might have expected that blue states would trend redder and red states would trend bluer, toward a purple consensus, based on regression to the mean if nothing else. But that isn’t happening. Instead, red states are generally getting redder, and blue states are generally getting bluer.

You can track this in a variety of ways, but the Wall Street Journal applied a simple criterion: what has been happening to each state’s top personal income tax rate?

    U.S. politics are getting more polarized and, increasingly, so are state income-tax systems.

    Republican-led states are racing each other to flatten, cut and eliminate individual income taxes, with 23 states lowering their top income-tax rates since 2021. Mississippi and Oklahoma, among others, put themselves on paths to eliminate personal income taxes. South Carolina is setting a course this year to drop its top income-tax rate to 1.99%, and Missouri residents may vote this November on a plan to phase out income taxes and allow lawmakers to expand sales taxes.

    Democratic-controlled states are moving the opposite way, pushing to increase taxes on top earners to combat inequality and plug budget holes expected from Republicans’ cuts to federal health and nutrition assistance programs. Washington state’s legislature last week sent Gov. Bob Ferguson a bill that would create a 9.9% income tax on earnings over $1 million. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is pushing state lawmakers to raise income taxes on high-income households. Hikes on top earners are a priority for some Democrats and progressive groups as they head to elections this fall in Rhode Island and Colorado.

    The middle ground is quickly disappearing.

More: https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2026/03/blue-and-red-states-draw-farther-apart.php