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|    Message 38,707 of 39,416    |
|    " (ಠ_ಠ)Раиса" <" (_ to All    |
|    Why is the PST in Manitoba such an issue    |
|    27 Jun 14 14:09:47    |
      XPost: bc.politics, man.politics, winnipeg.general       XPost: ont.politics       From: "@nyet.ca              Winnipegers, uou should think long and hard about even considering       throwing over a good NDP government over a 1% hike in your PST.       Other provinces have it as hard, and harder, than your province does.       Compare, and remember the 'frying pan into the fire' analogy.              It was a rightwing party that tried to force the HST onto British       Columbians. And that would have put federal taxes and provincial taxes       onto many items not before subject to one or both of them. Learn from       our mistake . . . keep rightwing governments out of your pockets.                     Province GST PST HST Provincial Tax Information       Alberta 5% n/a n/a Alberta Tax and Revenue Administration       BC 5% 7% n/a BC Consumer Taxes       Manitoba 5% 8% n/a Manitoba Retail Sales Tax       New Brunswick n/a n/a 13% New Brunswick Taxes       Newfoundland n/a n/a 13% Taxes in Newfoundland and Labrador       NWT 5% n/a n/a NWT Taxation       Nova Scotia n/a n/a 15% Information for Nova Scotia Taxpayers       Nunavut 5% n/a n/a Nunavut Taxes       Ontario n/a n/a 13% Ontario HST       PEI n/a n/a 14% PEI HST       Quebec 5% 9.975% n/a Quebec GST and QST       Saskatchewan 5% 5% n/a Saskatchewan Provincial Sales Tax       Yukon 5% n/a n/a Yukon Taxation       ____________________________________              The Canadian Press - June 27, 2014              Manitoba Opposition leader says fight over sales tax increase will continue                     WINNIPEG - Manitoba Opposition Leader Brian Pallister says he will       continue to fight the government's sales tax increase, despite opinion       polls that suggest the battle is not winning over many voters.              Pallister says he'd rather be respected than popular and the tax hike is       hurting families across the province.              Recent opinion polls suggest the NDP government's popularity has dropped       sharply since the sales tax jumped to eight per cent from seven last summer.              But the government's losses have gone mostly to the Liberals or the       undecided camp.              Tory support in a Probe Research poll this week was pegged at 45 per       cent â very close to the 43.5 per cent the party won in the 2011 election.              The Tories dragged out the legislature session last year to try to block       the tax hike, and took the issue to court, arguing the increase violated       the province's balanced budget law.              The judge in the case has reserved his decision.              The NDP government has said the extra cash was needed to finance road       work, flood-prevention projects and other infrastructure.              "(Pallister's) decision to roll back the one-point increase in the PST       would immediately mean reducing spending on roads, bridges, flood       protection and clean water infrastructure by $276 million," government       press secretary Caedmon Malowany wrote in an email.              Pallister said the tax jump must be reversed.              "I respect Manitobans ... and I respect the fact that they deserve to       get more out of what they do, when they work and when they save, than       they're getting in this province under the NDP."              Pallister has said he would reverse the sales tax increase in his first       term if he were elected premier. He has also promised he would cut       government spending by not filling some public-sector jobs when they       became vacant.              He repeated a pledge Friday to not layoff any front-line civil servants       if elected. He said his plan is very different from the 100,000 public       sector cuts promised by Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak in the       Ontario election.              "I felt that the approach that was taken by the Ontario campaign team       was irresponsible and dangerous, and it's not the approach we would take."              Many public-sector workers are approaching retirement age in the next       five years, Pallister said, and non-essential positions could be cut       through attrition.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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