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Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Sides with AG Fitch Against Overreaching Tax Mandate

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US Fifth circuit court of appeals

JACKSON, Miss. – The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has affirmed a permanent injunction, siding with Attorney General Lynn Fitch. The court agreed that the Tax Mandate in the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) “unlawfully forces the States to adopt certain tax policies.” The ruling notes that the mandate exceeds Congress’ Spending Clause authority and violates the anti-commandeering doctrine. General Fitch filed the suit alongside the Attorneys General of Texas and Louisiana.

“It is the responsibility of our elected legislators to decide how and when to cut taxes, as well as how to best stimulate economic growth post-COVID-19,” said Attorney General Lynn Fitch. “This thoughtful opinion ensures that decisions with substantial fiscal and economic implications for our State are made by Mississippi legislators with the needs of the Mississippi citizens they represent in mind. I am proud to stand with both Texas and Louisiana to protect our right to give money back to the people without federal interference or overreach.”

The Tax Mandate is a provision of ARPA, signed into law on March 11, 2021. It bars states from “directly or indirectly” using federal aid granted in ARPA for tax cuts. The Treasury may claw back funds it believes have been misused for tax relief.

General Fitch, along with the Attorneys General for Louisiana and Texas, filed the suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas on May 3, 2021. They argued that the Tax Mandate violates the Spending Clause of the U.S. Constitution and commandeers the States’ authority over their tax policies. They also claimed it is ambiguous and not reasonably related to encouraging post-pandemic economic recovery.

Court’s Findings and Opinions

“In exercising its power under the Spending Clause, Congress has a constitutional obligation to cut a clear deal with the states when they accept federal funding. Because the challenged provision is not clear about what it requires of the states, it falls short of that obligation and is impermissibly ambiguous,” the opinion explains.

Under ARPA, Mississippi received nearly $2 billion in COVID-19 relief funds, equivalent to 31% of Mississippi’s 2021 budget. Governor Reeves signed the Mississippi Tax Freedom Act into law on April 5, 2022. This law provides more than $500 million in tax relief. Eliminating the 4% tax bracket and gradually scaling back the 5% top bracket to 4% over four years.

“ARPA coerces [the States] into making a choice between losing potentially billions of dollars or surrendering their ability to set state tax policy,” the three-judge panel continued.

Read the Fifth Circuit’s opinion here.

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