FILE – Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers speaks during the annual State of the State address Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2023, in Madison, Wis. A two-year spending plan that cuts income taxes, increases funding for K-12 schools and cuts the University of Wisconsin’s budget in a fight over diversity, equity and inclusion programming is up for final legislative approval on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Evers hasn’t said yet what he will do and Republicans tried to write the budget in such a way that it would be difficult for him to make substantial changes even with his line-item veto power. (AP Photo/Morry Gash, File)
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A two-year spending plan that would cut income taxes across the board, increase funding for K-12 schools and cut the University of Wisconsin’s budget in a fight over diversity, equity and inclusion programming is up for final approval in the Republican-controlled Legislature on Thursday.
Republicans touted the budget as investing in the state’s priorities by cutting income taxes by $3.5 billion. reducing the number of brackets to move closer to a flat tax, increasing funding for K-12 public and private choice schools, and increasing pay for prison workers, prosecutors and public defenders.
The budget also would raise pay for all state employees by 6% over the next two years.
Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said the budget, some parts of it were reached with bipartisan support, was a victory for taxpayers.
Democrats, who don’t have the votes to stop the Republican-authored plan, said it was a missed opportunity given the state’s projected $7 billion budget surplus. They argue that Republicans disregarded the needs of the working class to enact a tax cut that benefits the wealthiest taxpayers.
“This budget just does not meet the historic needs of this moment,” Democratic Minority Leader Greta Neubauer said before debate began.
The Senate passed the budget on Wednesday on a nearly party-line vote, with no Democrats in support.
Once the GOP-controlled Assembly passes the plan Thursday, it will head to Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, who could make changes with his partial veto or even wipe out the entire budget, though that would be unlikely as it would require lawmakers to start over and scrap aspects that Evers helped craft.
Evers hasn’t said what he will do and Republicans tried to write the budget in such a way that it would be difficult for him to make substantial changes even with his line-item veto power.
“We trust he will use his power to do the right thing by the people of Wisconsin when he gets it,” Neubauer said, dodging questions about whether she would support him vetoing the entire budget.
Evers previously threatened to veto the entire budget over the University of Wisconsin’s $32 million cut, funding that Republicans identified as going toward diversity, equity, or DEI, programming and staff. But the budget would allow for the university to get the funding later if it could show it would go toward workforce development and not DEI.
Republicans also refused to fund UW’s top building project priority, a new engineering facility on the Madison campus. The university, backed by the state’s business leaders, urged lawmakers to reconsider, saying the new building would get at the heart of Republicans’ goal of workforce development because it would allow for more students to graduate with engineering degrees.
The cut to UW stands out in a $99 billion budget where funding was increased or at least held steady across state government. Public K-12 schools, for example, would see a $1 billion funding increase under a deal Republicans reached with Evers that would also bolster funding for local governments by $1 billion.
Democrats also object to a $3.5 billion income tax cut that would benefit wealthy filers more than lower income earners. The tax cut shrinks Wisconsin’s brackets from four to three, moving it closer to the flat income tax rate in neighboring Illinois.
Evers had proposed an income tax cut more targeted to lower- and middle-income earners.
“The goal is to try and keep successful people in Wisconsin no matter what their income,” Vos said in defense of the tax cuts for wealthier filers.
Republicans defend their cuts to a child care program and a state office of school safety, saying the don’t want to commit too much of the surplus to areas that require ongoing spending.
The budget covers the two-year period that begins Saturday and runs through June 30, 2025. Current spending levels will continue until Evers signs a new budget.
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