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Ventura: Last year was the first time a rebate had ever been given, so it was new territory; we gave the largest rebate in the history of the United States of America, and we did it to the best of our ability. This rebate, we can probably do it a little better than we did the first one, or cover more people.But Ventura didn't offer an opinion on sending retroactive checks to the Minnesotans who missed out on last year's rebate, an idea supported by both House and Senate DFLers. They want to split this year's money into two chunks, a new sales tax rebate and a retroactive one. House Republicans are open to the idea of a retroactive rebate. Majority Leader Tim Pawlenty of Eagan says his caucus generally supports the governor's rebate plan, although Republicans may want to make it even bigger.
Pawlenty: The rebate is for sure, I mean, the Senate favors that, we favor that, the governor favors that, we're going to wrangle a little bit about the details, but a rebate in the neighborhood of $500 million plus whatever comes forward as one-time money in the February forecast, that's going to.Pawlenty says the bigger debate will be over permanent tax cuts. The governor says he won't support permanent cuts this session except for reductions in vehicle license-tab fees.
"They're unhappy with me, they're unhappy with a decision I made to combine
two agencies. I find that amazing, I mean the public is out there
telling us, 'cut taxes, streamline and make government more efficient, do a
better job with government.'"
- Governor Ventura |
Ventura: They're unhappy with me, they're unhappy with a decision I made to combine two agencies. I find that amazing, I mean the public is out there telling us, "cut taxes, streamline and make government more efficient, do a better job with government." I try to do that and they're unhappy because I did it without consulting them.A caller suggested that it was hypocritical for legislators to whine about being left out of the process. He noted that many lawmakers don't support putting a unicameral legislature on the ballot, essentially leaving voters out of the decision.
Ventura: I see nothing wrong with that. Why wouldn't you want people that are a part of the merger, to come forward and say, "this merger's working fine," when it seems the merger's the big issue?Ventura says he won't ask Minn to resign. He also lashed out at DFLer Steve Novak, who chairs the Senate committee that rejected Minn's confirmation. Ventura accused Novak of making cat-calls from the audience when the governor talked about a one-house legislature at a Chamber of Commerce event earlier this week. Ventura says even if Novak doesn't like him, he should show respect for the office of governor. Novak wasn't available for comment.