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Michael Laxer lives in Toronto where he runs a bookstore with his partner Natalie. Michael has a Degree in History from Glendon College of York University. He is a political activist, a two-time former candidate and former election organizer for the NDP, was a socialist candidate for Toronto City Council in 2010 and is on the executive of the newly formed Socialist Party of Ontario.

The Ontario budget and the ONDP caucus salaries by the numbers

| April 26, 2012

So... let us go through it by the income interests.

The ONDP and its defenders on the issue of the very recently passed Ontario budget have been quick to talk of  "making parliament work" and of being "responsible." The Liberals, obviously, have embraced this.

But make parliament work for who, exactly?

Many have applauded the so-called ONDP tax that applies to almost no one. The miniscule charge on the ULTRA wealthy that only comes into effect on over $500,000 in income, non-inclusive! A tax that McGuinty has already said will be used to pay off capitalist creditors... making it, for what it is, a tax from the very rich to the very rich.

Meanwhile the appalling fact that welfare recipients must accept what is, in reality, a cut and the fact that no one at all has put the minimum wage on the table goes unmentioned.

Why?

Perhaps, in part, because the austerity budget agreed upon by the Liberals and the ONDP does not effect the pocket books of the ONDP caucus at all.

It is really easy to take a "sensible" and "reasonable" stand on the poor, minimum wage workers, and public sector workers when you have no connection to their reality in anyway. Especially when you have made no attempt to ensure that their wages or paltry benefits are not either frozen or might as well be. Your "contribution", which would normally take the form of increased taxes, amounts to exactly nothing.

Despite 20 years of personal income tax cuts, most pronounced on the income brackets the MPPs lie within, income tax cuts that have caused the entire "crisis" we exist in now, the only "reversal" of this that is being called for does not apply to the ONDP (or Liberal) caucus members who made this deal and whose incomes still fall well within the top 2 per cent of earners.

So what does that mean in terms of numbers?

Well, in 2011 Andrea Horwath made $158,156.96. Cheri DiNovo $129,722.63. Peter Taubuns $123,334.34. etc.

Meanwhile, a frozen minimum wage yearly income amounts to $21,320 a year and remains FROZEN. Which means, given inflation over the last year it has declined by over 3 per cent relative to the cost of living.

Much, much worse is an income of a single person on welfare.

That was approximately $597.92 a month prior to this budget. It will increase by 1 per cent to, stunningly and appallingly, around $603.90.

That means a yearly welfare income of, for a single recipient, approximately $7,246.80.

Seriously.

It also means an increase of only around sixty dollars a year while none of the ONDP caucus members will see their taxes increase by even that same amount. In fact, their personal taxes will not increase by one penny. While, yet again, welfare and disability rates will decrease on the most vulnerable versus inflation.

By over 2 per cent this year and by, stunningly, at least 10-20 per cent over the last decade.

But, even staying with this year alone, to equal the "sacrifices" that those on welfare are making, by having their taxes increase at inflation in lock step to the actual, in real terms, decrease in benefits of those on welfare versus inflation, the ONDP caucus members should pay, at minimum, in excess of  $2,400 a year in increased personal taxes.

They are not doing this, needless to say.

So before we talk about the alleged "courage" of a tax increase that will not even apply to them, let us at least recall that the ONDP caucus members that made this choice, (and it was a choice), made around 16.5 times a year what a single welfare recipient did, and around six times what a minimum wage worker did.

And let us remember what living on these lower "incomes", especially in the face of other austerity cuts, really means,

Next time you wonder about income inequality in our society and why MPPs of any stripe don't seem to want to seriously do anything about it... it is worth considering these numbers.

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Comments

So one more loud mouth with no answers has joined the fray. What has Laxer done , aside from handing out leaflets about his supposed socialist party? Bugger all!! Easy to complain when he has no answers just the usual arm chair socialist whining which I've been hearing for years. Every time I read the like of Laxer I remember an anti-poverty action meeting in which all the usual types were there expressing their views. And as I looked around the room I noticed that there were 6 people out of the 25 or so there who I'd seen at a anti NDP rally during the 1996 election standing side by side with the local Conservative candidate. I knew the protestors personally and wondered what their protest was about since most of them were on some sort of social assistance and the NDP had increased the rates. Now these same people are complaining about the NDP again. Hey , you got what you wanted , an extreme right wing gang under the Harris government  so stop your bloody whining. 

 

 

It's time to take the torches and pitchforks to ALL the fatcat pols at Queens Park. NONE of them are for the poor and all of them obey the banksters. The surest way to lose a class war is not to know you're in one!

A supporter of yours on Babble threads seems to hold the view that using progressive taxation to address income inequality is essentially a mug's game.

M. Spector wrote: "'Income inequality' may be mitigated by redistributing it through the tax system from the richest to the poorest. But that's NOT the same as reducing the income gap. Income remains income, whether it's taxed or not."

It's great to see that you're getting on board the Close the Gap train.

Three cheers for Michael Laxer! His is a much-needed voice on the left. He helps to deflate some of the spin surrounding the so-called NDP budget victory. Hopefully, he won't ignore the federal party.

Finally, someone points out the elephant in the room.

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