Taxpayers group to add clout with PAC
It plans to give money to candidates, officials
While considering for several years whether to form a PAC, the association's board finally announced it will jump into the political-giving contest just before the 2006 midterm legislative races, the group's vice president, Mike Jerman, said Monday.
"It all kind of came together the (public funding) for the soccer stadium, the transit bond every kind (of tax hike or public) giveaway" that disgusted the taxpayer association bosses enough to start up a PAC, Jerman said.
Several yet-to-be-named supporters have pledged up to $40,000 as matching cash, Jerman said. If matches are found, that original $80,000 political pot would immediately put the taxpayers PAC in the upper realms of state political action committees. Donors' names will be listed in the Sept. 15 PAC filing, but Jerman declined to name them now.
"We are in this for the long haul. We aim to be in the top 10" of political giving to legislative and local government candidates within a few years, Jerman said.
Stephenson often gets into tussles with organizations that push for more spending in various state programs. The Utah Education Association the state's largest teachers union has been a particular bugaboo for Stephenson and other taxpayer association personnel. And the UEA's PAC has been one of the state's largest for years.
UEA executive director Susan Kuziak said she's read the taxpayers' PAC announcement, and she believes the new PAC's leanings are much like the political agenda of Sen. Stephenson.
"It makes me wonder if the businesses that support the taxpayers association, and so probably will support its PAC financially, hold the same views as their spokesman (Stephenson)," said Kuziak. "Do (the business owners) really advocate for private school vouchers, for tax credits? Do they really want private industry taking over our education system? I suppose (the PAC's) motivation and results will be told over time."
The taxpayers group has named its political fund-raising arm TAXPAC. In its announcement press release, Jerman writes: "Are you tired of state and local elected officials claiming to be fiscally conservative at election time, while the rest of the time the last thing on their minds is the taxpayer? So are we!"



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