“This is disgusting,” said state Rep. Mandie Landry, D-New Orleans. “As a New Orleans resident, taxpayer and Catholic, it doesn’t make any sense to me why the Saints would go to these lengths to protect grown men who raped children. All of them should have been just as horrified at the allegations.”
Read MoreState Representative Mandie Landry is joined by The Advocate's Mark Ballard to discuss the recent terrorist attack on Bourbon Street.
Read More“This is not a choice”
Read MoreRepresentative Mandie Landry wants a state law that would require a more uniform policy that all coroner's offices would have to follow when it comes to notifying families of their loved ones.
Read MoreState Representative Mandie Landry also joined Jim to talk about the recently completed legislative session. Landry is skeptical the state is in a better business to grow the economy after "moving money around."
Read MoreFor example, if a statewide business court was established, lawsuits such as those brought by local parishes against oil and gas interests could end up in a statewide business court controlled by judges who don’t live where the coastal damage took place, said state Rep. Mandie Landry, D-New Orleans.
Read More“Honestly, this is all being decided by men behind doors, like everything has happened here for a long time. And the rest of us here, little bits of information here and there. It does seem like there’s a huge amount of discord behind the scene and among parties and House and Senate members,” said Rep. Landry.
Read More“I think pretty much everyone thinks this is too much in too little time and too fast and that there could be huge repercussions,” said Democratic Rep. Mandie Landry, who has been one of the most vocal opponents of the tax package.
Read MoreVoting against were two New Orleans Democrats: Reps. Mandie Landry and Matthew Willard.
Read More“These are new taxes. We are now raising taxes,” Landry said. “We’re just moving things around. I just think this hearing is an example of us not understanding much of what’s going on”
Read More“These are new taxes. I’m not paying them right now. This is a tax on fixing the window, the fence, all these things. So we’re raising taxes,” said state Rep. Mandie Landry, D-New Orleans.
Read More“Pest control, fixing the A/C, various plumbing, security system, fixing my fence, broken window, grass, had to paint a wall, shingles on the roof. Those are going to be additional expenses in my budget with taxes on them,” Landry explained.
Read More“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.
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