by Tim Eyman | Sep 24, 2015
I-1366 is essential: without the 2/3, Olympia consistently raises taxes We are laser-beam focused on the campaign for Initiative 1366, our latest tougher-to-raise-taxes initiative. Thanks to all of you, I-1366 is on this November ballot. Almost 2/3 of voters...
by Tim Eyman | Sep 22, 2015
Opponents are going crazy — here’s why By working hard and working together, we qualified and voters passed 2/3 initiatives in 2007, 2010, and 2012 — each win bigger than the last. The results were clear: there were no tax increases in the...
by Tim Eyman | Sep 21, 2015
Clear-cut victory for our initiative: Pam Roach roasts opponent of 1366 Voters’ guides play a key role in initiative campaigns. So we’re extremely proud to say that Senator Pam Roach knocked the ball out of the ballpark when it comes to the voters guide...
by Tim Eyman | Sep 18, 2015
Explaining the insanity of taking out a 2nd mortgage and loaning $250K to I-1366 Getting one initiative on the ballot is brutally difficult. That’s what makes this truly extraordinary: working together, we’ve succeeded at qualifying four 2/3 initiatives...
by Tim Eyman | Sep 14, 2015
Passage of 1366 best way to kill threat of state income tax/capital gains tax Powerful voices are pushing Olympia to impose a new state income tax/capital gains tax. Governor Jay Inslee, liberal legislators and activists, government unions, the state supreme court,...
[…] 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…