Colorado the Next Zero-Income Tax State?

US
Colorado state capitol building in Denver. (carl173/iStock/Getty Images)
The effort to chisel away at the state income tax has gained steam in the Centennial State. Can voters and Governor Polis pull it off?




NRPLUS MEMBER ARTICLE

W
hen an interviewer recently asked Colorado’s Democratic governor Jared Polis what the state’s income-tax rate should be, he answered without hesitation: “It should be zero.”

For many Coloradans, this came as no surprise: The effort to chisel away at the income tax has already gained steam in the state. Last year, voters reduced the tax with Proposition 116 — a ballot initiative that brought the rate from 4.63 percent to 4.55 percent. The Denver-based Independence Institute, where I work, led last year’s rate-reduction campaign, through its issue committee, and plans to advocate another tax cut next year. Yet, for reasons discussed

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