“So we’re supposed to vote on cutting the budget by about a billion dollars a year without roughly knowing now how we’re going to plug it?” Landry questioned.
Read MoreRep. Mandie Landry, also a New Orleans Democrat, expressed her concern, implying that this repeal would unfairly favor non-Louisiana corporations at the expense of local-owned businesses.
Read MoreWhat makes the cost for you at home hard to figure out is that in the bill there is an exemption for remodeling or ‘capital improvements’; meaning if you had to fix your roof and windows, the remodeling would be tax exempt. However, if you just had to do a simple repair, that would be taxed, leaving the business owner to do the math. This was a big concern today for House Democrat Representative Mandie Landry.
Read MoreRep. Mandie Landry, D-New Orleans, said she doesn’t think people are leaving because of the state’s tax structure.
Read MoreThe Louisiana House Democratic Caucus tweeted out its support for the position of Willard and Rep. Landry, ignoring the yes vote of the other four
Read MoreThe administration says the overall net effect would generate a small budget surplus, but that view has been contested by two Democrats from New Orleans — Rep. Mandie Landry and Rep. Matthew Willard — and by Jan Moller, director of Invest in Louisiana, a Baton Rouge nonprofit that favors a progressive tax system. They worry that the net effect of the changes would be budget deficits.
Read MoreRep. Mandie Landry cautioned, “It’s propaganda to tell people taxes are going down because your income tax may go down but corporate taxes are going down by a lot, and we’re raising taxes in other places to do this.”
Read More"I thought Republicans didn't want to [add new taxes]," Landry remarked, voicing Democratic concerns that the plan could raise costs for consumers without clear benefits.
Read MoreThe proposed changes are a part of House Bill 2, sponsored by Rep. Julie Emerson, R-Carencro, which cleared the House Ways & Means Committee on Sunday. It received opposition from New Orleans Reps. Matt Willard and Mandie Landry, both Democrats.
Read More“This is a big ask. To make such a huge cut without knowing what we’re going to add to it.”
Read MoreState Rep. Mandie Landry (D-New Orleans) posed the question, “Where is this hole going to be plugged from?”
Read More“The people I know in New Orleans are either going to have to leave, or they’re going to have to go back to the service industry,” said Landry, who is not related to the governor.
Read More“Religion in the classroom seems like it was decided a long time ago,” said Landry. “It’s definitely promoting religion period and promoting Christianity and not everyone, not every kid, subscribed to those religions.”
Read MoreBut State Representative Mandie Landry, D-New Orleans, has doubts. “Five regular sessions, this is going to create jobs and this is going to bring people here, and this is going to do this, that and the other, and I haven’t seen it. So how is this different? Have you researched it and not just look at North Carolina, which like I said took a decade. This is a hard sell.”
Read MoreThe inventory tax exemption bill passed 15-2 in committee with Democratic Rep. Mandie Landry and Rep. Matthew Willard, both of New Orleans in opposition.
Read More‘I think it’s propaganda to tell people taxes are going down because your income tax may go down but corporate taxes are going down by a lot and we’re raising taxes in other places to do this," said Rep. Mandie Landry (D-New Orleans).
Read MoreThe vote on House Bill was 15-2, with only Rep. Matthew Willard and Rep. Mandie Landry, both New Orleans Democrats, voting in opposition, out of worries that the changes would benefit big corporations and cause budget deficits.
Read MoreGreatly outnumbered in the Legislature, Democrats could mount only three votes in opposition to House Bill 1, which would establish a flat rate on individual income taxes. The opposing votes came from Rep. Marcus Bryant of New Iberia, Rep. Mandie Landry of New Orleans and Rep. Matt Willard of New Orleans.
Read More“I voted against the flat tax because it is a regressive tax,” Rep. Landry said. “It rewards the rich and harms the poor.”
Read More“We’re raising taxes on everyone who lives here. You keep talking about landscapers,” said Rep. Mandie Landry, D-New Orleans.
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