Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar has told the Government it will get no support from her party for the amendments to the Property Tax (Amendment) Bill and has called for it to be repealed.
Persad-Bissessar was the first to respond after Finance Minister Colm Imbert introduced the amendment bill that will reduce the tax rate on the annual rental value of residential properties from three to two per cent during yesterday’s sitting of Parliament.
“We are totally against the property tax because it is an unfair tax. It would cause more hardship upon the population. We do not support, whether it is zero per cent, two per cent, three per cent, any per cent. The whole property tax must go,” Persad-Bissessar said.
She insisted that the tax would bring undue hardship on citizens and labelled it a “Poverty Tax”.
She reminded the Government that history is replete with revolutions and wars because ordinary people refused to pay unfair taxes.
“And don’t forget, in 2009, the Property Tax Act...the law passed by that government in 2009...was one of the pieces of legislation and one of the actions of that PNM government that brought down that government in 2010,” she said.
She called the tax “a direct attack on the people” by the Government.
“What Government should have done today...what it should have done years ago, was to bring a bill to repeal the Property Tax Act. That is what we should be doing today,” Persad-Bissessar said.
She denied claims by Minister Imbert that her Finance Minister in the People’s Partnership government (Larry Howai) had sought to introduce the tax in 2014, noting that in 2015, Howai categorically denied that claim and told the population that the Cabinet had never considered it.
Instead, she reminded the House that in 2009, Diego Martin West MP, now Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley, had warned his own PNM government about the hardships that the tax could bring.
Dr Rowley was at odds with Prime Minister Patrick Manning at the time and was removed as a Cabinet Minister.
She read from the Parliament’s Hansard recording of Dr Rowley’s contribution on Friday, December 18, 2009:
“I know many people in this country for whom $100 is much money. There are many people in this country who are struggling to make ends meet and such persons, faced with an increase of $200, $500 or $600, they are living at the margin.”
Persad-Bissessar continued reading from the Hansard: “Taxation is never a light matter. It is for the Government to come clean and say exactly what we are doing. We cannot go forward under the guise that we fool them and the money will come in down the road when it is too late. Trust is the only thing that the people want from the Government and the only thing to ameliorate or remove the anger, the resentment and anxiety, associated with this tax is for the Government’s spokesperson to come clean and say what we are doing.”
Persad-Bissessar said, “Every single word of the honourable member for Diego Martin West still rings true today. And I ask whatever happened in the last 15 years. What happened? What changed someone from fighting for their poor constituents to now saying that the property tax is their number one priority?”
She said when questioned about the tax in the lead-up to the 2015 election, Dr Rowley had denied it, saying that the tax was “done and dealt with”.
Persad-Bissessar told the House that if the Government had listened to the people as it claimed, then there would be no property tax today.