by Tim Eyman | Mar 2, 2015
A successful businessman has offered to match all March donations to Initiative 1366 My $150,000 loan to the I-1366 campaign from a 2nd mortgage on my home supercharged the month of February. It allowed us to immediately hire professional signature gatherers and...
by Tim Eyman | Feb 24, 2015
With Governors like Jay Inslee, Initiative 1366 is absolutely essential When running for the governor in 2012, candidate Jay Inslee said tax increases would take us “on the wrong road.” He said tax hikes were “off the table.” He repeatedly...
by Tim Eyman | Feb 19, 2015
What’s it worth to you to be permanently protected from Olympia’s insatiable tax appetite? In 2007, we sponsored Initiative 960, reinstating the 2/3. Even though opponents spent $1.3 million, voters passed it by a comfortable margin. The benefit of...
by Tim Eyman | Feb 11, 2015
Jump-starting signature drive for I-1366 a huge success – help us keep it going 5 times the voters have passed initiatives making it tougher for Olympia to take more of the people’s money. Voters approved all of them. And when those 2/3 initiatives...
by Tim Eyman | Feb 9, 2015
Eyman loans $150,000 from a 2nd mortgage on his home to jump-start paid signature drive for I-1366 Last week, we announced the kick-off for this year’s initiative: the 2/3-For-Taxes Constitutional Amendment Initiative. It is, by far, the most impactful,...
[…] 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…