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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-03-25
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<text id=90TT1717>
<title>
July 02, 1990: New Jersey's Robin Hood
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
July 02, 1990 Nelson Mandela:A Hero In America
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 24
New Jersey's Robin Hood
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Governor James Florio has a radical idea for this read-my-lips
era: face reality and raise taxes
</p>
<p>By Joelle Attinger
</p>
<p> "The issue isn't more or less government," New Jersey
Governor James Florio says tersely. "It's dumb vs. smart
government." Barely into his sixth month in office, Democrat
Florio has been giving lessons to politicians across the
country--and in Washington--not only about smart government
but also about leadership. Using populist rhetoric and
unconventional straight talk and tireless stumping for his
programs, Florio, 52, has launched the largest barrage of
government initiatives in the Garden State since Woodrow Wilson
sat in Trenton from 1911 to 1913. More important, he has set
out to demonstrate that voters' "common sense" can provide the
antidote to the political poison of a tax increase.
</p>
<p> Faced with a projected 1991 deficit of $3 billion when he
took office in January, Florio rejected the back-door approach
of relying on increased "user fees" and "sin taxes" (on liquor
and cigarettes) so popular among his peers. Instead he became
the only Governor of this read-my-lips era to embrace the
discarded notion of a progressive tax, which hits New Jersey's
wealthiest residents hardest by doubling the bite on their
income to 7%.
</p>
<p> Last week he persuaded the state legislature to follow his
lead and vote for $2.8 billion in income and sales taxes.
Coupled with an almost equal amount in spending cuts, the money
will not only allow New Jersey to dig itself out of debt but
should also provide additional state education aid to relieve
homeowners of one of the most onerous property-tax rates in the
U.S. Here too Florio soaked the rich: the legislature approved
a plan to shift the bulk of its education assistance from the
wealthiest to the poorest districts by 1995, leaving the
affluent to make up the difference on their own.
</p>
<p> Opponents have dubbed Florio "Robin Hood" for his overt
redistribution of the tax burden, but the Governor is
unapologetic. "Something historically significant is happening
here," he boasted after his legislative victories. "This is a
day we bring fairness to the children of New Jersey and to the
beleaguered and besieged middle class." "Hardly," countered
Assembly minority leader Garabed Haytaian, who assails the new
budget as a "farce, a tragedy of tax increases that will give
us a Florio recession."
</p>
<p> Moaning is about the best Republicans and other critics have
managed since Florio, a former amateur boxer, beat G.O.P.
candidate Jim Courter last fall in a campaign that got nasty
on both sides. In his inaugural speech, the new Governor
whacked at the state's auto-insurance premiums, the nation's
highest; within weeks he had signed a 20% reduction into law.
He quickly followed with a blow to the powerful gun lobby: in
May, New Jersey enacted the stiffest law in the U.S. on owning
or selling semiautomatic firearms. In March he launched his
attack on the state's tax structure, unveiling his $12.4
billion tax-and-slash budget. Anticipating that the state's
liberal Supreme Court would soon order that aid to school
districts be equalized, Florio beat the jurists to the punch
by proposing his own plan. "Everyone is a bit shell-shocked,"
says former Democratic assemblyman Alan Karcher. "He had made
a career out of being associated with safe issues."
</p>
<p> During eight terms in Congress, Florio had a reputation as
a somewhat sanctimonious loner, better known for tending to
constituent needs than for innovative leadership. Even as a
candidate, he skirted specifics, going so far as to proclaim
that he did not see the need for new taxes. But budget
realities and the assumption of command revealed a very
different Jim Florio. "Legislatures react," he says crisply.
"Executives initiate." With 67% of New Jerseyites grudgingly
agreeing that new taxes were inevitable, Florio worked them
relentlessly for support of his proposals. In diners, gyms,
boardrooms and convention halls, he explained his position
again and again. "A lot of politicians are just plain lazy,"
he says in the midst of another chaotic day. "They just don't
want to make the case, and so they end up pandering to special
interests. To underestimate the people is extremely dumb."
</p>
<p> It hasn't hurt Florio to remind voters that his popular
Republican predecessor, Thomas Kean, left the state with a $592
million deficit this year and a shaky economic future. "Florio
didn't create the fiscal crisis, and he's made a strong case
for solving it," says Richard Roper, director of the program
for New Jersey affairs at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School.
"As a result, New Jersey is willing to meet him halfway."
</p>
<p> It is the other half of the bargain that concerns voters.
"I understand that money is needed," says television producer
Thomas C. Guy Jr. of Newark. "But I'm reluctant without a
guarantee that those taxes will translate into something
tangible." The Governor has given himself a year to prove the
doubters wrong. He has already begun efforts to trim the state
payroll and bring spending further under control. Almost 1,500
government jobs (of a total 71,000) have been eliminated in all
areas except corrections and human services. Floriocrats are
also cutting back such perks as state cars and credit cards.
Improvement in New Jersey's poorest school districts will take
longer to accomplish, but Florio is considering such concrete
standards as postgraduate employment and college acceptance
rates to supplement test scores as indicators of the system's
effectiveness.
</p>
<p> Few expect Florio to wait for results before launching other
initiatives. An assault on the state's medical-insurance costs
is already on the drawing boards, and other targets are being
defined. New Jersey's Governor knows he cannot stand still: as
every boxer learns, success comes from quick footwork.
</p>
<p>FLORIO'S FAST START
</p>
<p> In his first six months, New Jersey:
</p>
<p>-- reduced auto-insurance premiums 20%
</p>
<p>-- curbed sale and ownership of semiautomatic assault-style
rifles
</p>
<p>-- doubled (to 7%) the tax on family incomes above $150,000
</p>
<p>-- shifted the bulk of $1.1 billion in school aid to poorer
districts
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>