Did Rep. Timothy Johnson pledge to constituents that he would never vote to raise their taxes?
Americans for Tax Reform, the anti-tax group headed by Grover Norquist, lists the Illinois Republican as one of 238 House Members who have signed its Taxpayer Protection Pledge, in which lawmakers vow to “oppose any and all efforts” to raise tax rates.
But now Johnson, who faces a new, more Democratic district thanks to redistricting, said it’s “disingenuous and irresponsible” for lawmakers to make such a vow.
At a town hall in Normal, Ill., on Feb. 23, Johnson denied ever signing such a pledge to a constituent in what the Pantagraph newspaper called a “heated exchange.”
Asked about the report, Johnson initially told Roll Call, “I never signed anything,” and he said he would “look at” contacting Norquist’s group to correct its list.
In the middle of the interview, Johnson called his chief of staff, Mark Shelden, to double-check. After the call, he maintained that he hadn’t signed the pledge, saying, “I haven’t communicated with them nor did I ever sign anything.”
However, Americans for Tax Reform provided Roll Call with a copy of Johnson’s signature on the tax pledge from 2002.
On Feb. 26, 2002, Johnson pledged to “ONE, oppose any and all efforts to increase the marginal income tax rates for individuals and/or businesses; and TWO, oppose any net reduction or elimination of deductions and credits, unless matched dollar for dollar by further reducing tax rates.”
Matt Bisbee, Johnson’s press secretary at the time, signed as a witness.
In a phone interview after Roll Call sent a copy of the document to Shelden, Johnson conceded he had signed the pledge but said it was no longer binding for him.
“I would never in a million years have considered this as some kind of a locked-in-granite pledge. Frankly, I didn’t even remember it. That shows you how obscure it was to me,” Johnson said.
“My understanding was then, as I remember it, and certainly now, is that nobody could possibly ever in a million years, in their wildest imagination, expect you to sign something that was right before a primary election and then you’d be locked in on that position the whole rest of your career. Particularly something like taxes and particularly when the national debt 10 and a half years ago was $6 trillion and now it’s going to be $17 trillion.”
Johnson said it was “probably” someone from his office who actually signed the pledge, not him, but that was not “particularly relevant. ... I’m not going to deny it.”
Johnson argued the issue of taxes is one where changing circumstances are relevant.
“As I recall, and again, this was something 10 and a half years ago, the wording was, ‘I won’t vote for any marginal rate increases’ and so forth. Presumably, most Members of Congress plan to be there more than one cycle. So nobody could lock themselves in perpetuity into a position like that. That’s like saying you’d never vote for armed intervention in a foreign country, until we get attacked.”
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