Leaders of both Republican caucuses floated the idea of exploring continued tax cuts and education investments Tuesday during Organization Day, which marks the beginning of the 2023 legislative session.
The day includes swearing in newly elected legislators and formalizes the votes for leaders in the House and Senate chambers.
GOP Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray (above, center) of Martinsville, said he âloved the idea of tax cutsâ to reporters Tuesday, even floating the eventual elimination of income taxes in later sessions.
âWe want to find something that makes Indiana appealing to workforce(s) across the country (and) that might be a piece of it,â Bray said. âRather than do a small incremental change here or there, if we can get to a point where we can restructure and get rid of that income tax altogether, I would take that proposal very seriously.â
But he said it wonât happen this session.
Indianaâs individual income tax brought in $8 billion in Fiscal Year 2022. Only nine states donât have a personal income tax.
Incoming Ways and Means Chair Rep. Jeff Thompson, R-Lizton, will be exploring ways to reduce the property tax burden on Hoosiers and explore whether Indiana could sustain an additional income tax cut on top of the one already scheduled. Huston said tax relief was necessary for Hoosiers due to ongoing inflation concerns and the âballooning size of the federal government.â
âI believe thereâs an appropriate role for government but it must be limited. Too often, our first response to a problem is to ask, âHowâs government going to fix this?â That question shouldnât be our first⌠it should be our last resort,â Huston said.
But in terms of pension investment strategies, Huston called for expanding the state government oversight during his Organization Day speech.
Advocates for ESG investing â or environmental-, social- and governance-focused investing â argue that they should use their investment funds in a way that reflects their values. Opponents say that results, not dogma, should drive investment strategies.
âWe want â particularly within our pension funds â our pension fund managers be focused on return on investment and not on energy and social policies,â Huston said.
He said that could include âa variety of different thingsâ such as politically motivated decisions to divest from other countries. Indiana cut off investment ties with Russia, nearly $150 million, after it invaded Ukraine.
Huston didnât specifically answer how Indiana would avoid the same consequence as Texas, which passed its own anti-ESG investment law in 2021. Researchers estimate that Texan entities will pay an additional $303-532 million in interest due to decreased bond competition following the ESG prohibition.
The speaker also again called for the expansion of parental choice and didnât rule out the return of an anti-Critical Race Theory bill that passed out of the House last year. That bill dictated what teachers could and couldnât teach in the classroom on various social issues, at one point devolving into an argument that teachers should be âimpartialâ when discussing Nazism.
The bill died in the Senate, however. Following that ârobust conversation,â Bray said that topic was best left to local schools.
âI think that was debated pretty vigorously in the school board elections across the state of Indiana,â Bray said. âThatâs a great avenue for Hoosiers to take a look at that issue and make decisions more locally than we can here in the General Assembly.â
House Minority Leader Phil GiaQuinta, D-Fort Wayne, repeated his appeal to Huston, and the rest of the Republican caucus, to not let divisive social issues distract from what he said Hoosiers truly value: things like funding public education, securing good-paying jobs and reducing health care costs.
âThe last couple of sessions, weâve seen more of these â what I would call â divisive social issues. In my opinion, I think it turns our attention away from the things that are really important to Hoosiers,â GiaQuinta said on Organization Day. âThe issues that weâve seen, particularly in the last year, made all kinds of headlines for the state of Indiana and not in a very good light.â
Huston didnât press any other social issues, telling reporters Monday that his caucus would âstand patâ on abortionâ and remained committed to passing a balanced budget.
âThereâll be a whole collection of bills that will be filed and Iâm sure both sides will want to weigh in on social issues,â Huston said. âBut this is a budget session and thatâs where I think the vast majority of the focus is going to be.â
Across the statehouse, Bray assured reporters that the Senate wouldnât be taking on those divisive social issues.
âYou wonât see those on our priority list,â Bray said.
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