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"Fair tax" Movement Dramatically Scales Back Iowa Plans

28 Nov 2007 08:07 am

(with reporting from the Atlantic's Chris Bodenner).

Where did all those Fairtaxers go?

Once ubiquitous at campaign events, the organization’s tax reforming supporters are nowhere to be found, and rumors have started to circulate that Americans for a Fair Taxation is broke, bankrupt, taxed out.

One of AFFT’s top organizers conceded yesterday that the group had essentially shut down its Iowa operations and would spend next to nothing in advance of the Iowa caucus. That’s an unwelcome turn of events for Mike Huckabee, who benefited from Fairtax’s organizational prowess in his surprise second place showing at August’s important Republican straw poll in Ames.

The organizer, who spoke with the Atlantic’s Chris Bodenner in exchange for anonymity, forwarded along an e-mail from David Polyansky, who until late last month was AFFT’s chief operating officer.

“Because our funding has not kept pace with our progress, even as we have dramatically cut costs, there is only one responsible course of action left to us in order to preserve the heart of the campaign and keep our efforts alive,” Polyanksy wrote in the e-mail. “The FairTax campaign will continue with a small staff to handle media inquiries and limited grassroots direction/contacts and to keep a light burning. To accomplish this, we must cut all other expenditures, which includes the salaries of almost the entire operating staff, myself included.
Simply put, the campaign is more important than any one person.”

Ken Hoagland, communications director Americans for Fair Taxation, denies that the group is on its death bed. “Those rumors are false. We went for broke in Iowa and nearly achieved broke,” he says, but the organization is “quickly recovering.” After the splurge in Iowa, AFFT “scaled back” on its operations and became “more modest” with its spending. It also shifted its fundraising focus away from big donors and towards the Internet.

Iowa Fairtaxers plan to circulate a flier at the January caucuses, but the organizer said the effort was “aimed more at educating those who attend the caucus than driving turnout to the caucus.”

During their “hiatus” from Iowa (the presidential primary Hoagland says AFFT is most concerned with), organizers “shifted attention” to South Carolina and Florida, which has an especially “strong base” for the Fair Tax. But Hoagland insists that the AFFT is poised to revamp its Iowa campaign “in about a week,” and says that Iowans should expect to see the Fair Tax bus all across the state through January 3, when both parties caucus.

But one of the group’s chief organizers in Iowa said any ramping up of activity in Iowa was “news to me.”

Several presidential candidates – notably Huckabee – back the Fairtaxers’ central proposal, which would, in one fell swoop, abolish the IRS, repeal the 16th Amendment, and replace the federal income tax with a national sales tax.

Comments (4)

Some HUGE news from Iowa, where Mike Huckabee is now ahead of Romney for the first time in the latest poll released this morning.

Combine this with the New York Times's story this morning of how voters are starting to get scared away of Romney because of his Mormon faith, and you were very right yesterday -- Romney is facing some huge challenges in Iowa. And it's getting away from him stunningly fast. Just two weeks ago this surge had not started, and now he is second!

The FairTax is not dying at all, perhaps just taking a pause.

Here in New Jersey, where the audience is tougher, we are putting an organization together and are primed for growth. We have mounted a letter-writing campaign in two congressional districts and hope to expand it.

I am meeting next week with regional directors in our neighboring state to help get the effort started in Southeastern Pennsylvania.

Don't write us off yet!

~Jim Bennett
Mr. Bennett is the New Jersey Co-Volunteer Director of Americans for Fair Taxation

I strongly support the Fair Tax. The problem in Iowa is the messenger. During the time that Huckabee was governor of Arkansas, state spending went up by 50% and the number of state employees rose by 20%. The concept of the Fair Tax will be easier to implement and do far more good when combined with tax and spending cuts instead of massive spending and tax increases....which is what Huckabee's record guarantees. As news of Huckabee's record gets out in Iowa, his support will go into free-fall there and Romney win will easily.

Here in Summerville (Charleston area) South Carolina, we're in the same place Jim Bennett is there in New Jersey. This slight lull by AFFT has only strenghtened the local and state Fair Tax efforts here. We have over 20,000 Fair Tax supporters here in this area and growing daily. I put together a monthly educational / organizational meeting, our first meeting was in October. We Doubled the number of attendees in November and will most likely draw a standing room only crowd in December and have to look for a new meeting location in January. We are finally becoming organized on a local and state level, vs. having hundreds of thousands of supporters who were relying on a small group of people in an office in Texas to guide every movement. Also, people were spoiled with freebies from AFFT, not concerning themselves with the fact that the funds would eventually run low...or completely dry. Now, local and state groups have had to deal with the reality that there is NOT a never ending supply of freebies, and developing local support ideas will help both the local and national efforts alike.

Dennis Keller
www.fairtaxsummerville.com


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