by Tim Eyman | Jul 19, 2017
$30 Tabs Initiative petitions: I urge everyone to reply to this campaign update Collecting 300,000 signatures in 5 months is doable. We collected and submitted 514,000 sigs for our $30 Tabs Initiative in 1999. Back then, we didn’t even have a website or an...
by Tim Eyman | Jul 17, 2017
Opponents of our new $30 Tabs Initiative resort to name-calling & schoolyard taunts Skyrocketing car tab taxes are indefensible. Sound Transit’s campaign lies are inexcusable. That’s why politicians, instead of addressing the problem, are instead...
by Tim Eyman | Jul 12, 2017
Stick it to Sound Transit – ST’s lies spawned $30 Tabs Initiative Our new $30 Tabs Initiative is making Sound Transit squeal like a stuck pig. And that makes you smile, doesn’t it? It sure makes me smile. Sticking it to Sound Transit is one of the...
by Tim Eyman | Jul 11, 2017
NEW INITIATIVE: Bring Back Our $30 Tabs — let’s stick it to Sound Transit In 1999, voters overwhelmingly passed Initiative 695 demanding $30 tabs. In 2002, voters overwhelmingly passed Initiative 776 demanding $30 tabs. But ever since...
by Tim Eyman | Jul 7, 2017
Property Tax Fairness Initiative I-1550: here’s what we accomplished No income tax. No capital gains tax. No carbon tax. No business taxes. And despite an all-out effort by local governments and their lobbyists, the 1% property tax cap on local governments...
[…] former Supreme Court Justice Richard Sanders did an admirable job defending Mr. Eyman and pointing out the obvious legal flaws and…
[…] While former Supreme Court Justice Richard Sanders did an admirable job defending Mr. Eyman and pointing out the obvious legal flaws…
[…] is deserving of its cherished reputation? With this unfathomable, fiction-worthy, but factual episode playing out in Washington, perhaps the rank hypocrisy…
[…] In the past 22 years, by working together with our thousands of heroic supporters, we’ve qualified 17 statewide initiatives…
[…] While former Supreme Court Justice Richard Sanders did an admirable job defending Mr. Eyman and pointing out the obvious…