Announcement for the Day! | PIxabay by Skitterphoto
Announcement for the Day! | PIxabay by Skitterphoto
South Dakota’s Republican-dominated Legislature passed a general sales tax cut of $104 million per year, lowering the taxes on groceries but not eliminating them entirely as Gov. Kristi Noem had urged.
South Dakota is one of a few states that tax groceries at the same rate as general sales.
But that plan’s tumultuous journey came to a final end on Tuesday, after it was rejected a second time.
“The governor’s prerogative is the governor’s prerogative,” Republican Rep. Chris Karr said. “All we can try to do is work with her.”
Lawmakers also toyed with property tax cuts designed to help retirees struggling with inflation but ultimately opted for the general sales tax cut, favoring its general scope of relief.
The debate then turned to how steeply to trim the sales tax, whether to put a time limit on it and how to address the Partridge amendment.
“You make it a priority to cut taxes, or you make it a priority to cut taxes exactly the way that you want to,” Republican House Leader Will Mortenson said. “We’re proud of the product we wound up with.”
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