King to LePage: ‘Man
up and apologize’
Posted: Mar 20, 2015
by Steve Mistler | Staff Writer |
Email | (207)
791-6345 | @stevemistler
Clearly, the Master of Horror is not satisfied with a
corrected weekly radio address.
Bangor resident Stephen King sent the above tweet Thursday
evening following a wave of national news stories detailing how Gov. Paul LePage had claimed that the
best-selling author doesn't pay income taxes in Maine and that he no
longer lives here. The governor's comments appeared in the governor's weekly
radio address that was released Wednesday, prompting King, a longtime
antagonist of LePage, to hit back at the governor for being "full of the
stuff that makes the grass grow green."
King followed up the tweet by disclosing on Friday how much
he paid the state in taxes the last two years.
“In 2013, my wife and I paid approximately 1.4 million (dollars)
in state taxes,” King said in an email to the Portland Press Herald on Friday
night. “As this is a matter of public record, I have no problem telling you
that. I would imagine 2014 was about the same, but I do not have those figures.
“In addition, the King Foundation gives grants from three to
five million dollars annually, mostly in Maine. We consider this a very fair
price for living in the most beautiful state in America.”
The administration scrambled to delete the reference to
King, but not before the dustup hit the national wire and was rewritten by
numerous major media outlets. Now King wants an apology.
"Governor Paul LePage implied that I don't pay my
taxes. I do. Every cent. I think he needs to man up and apologize," King
tweeted.
Marsha DeFilippo, a spokeswoman for King, said that she had
not received word of an apology as of Friday night.
It’s unclear how many stations broadcast the address, in
which LePage also says that conservation philanthropist Roxanne Quimby lives
outside Maine. King actually lives in Center Lovell and Bangor but spends his
winters in Florida, while Quimby also owns property in Maine.
The governor’s remarks were in the context of his defense of
a controversial tax overhaul proposal. The plan reduces the state income tax by
raising the sales tax and applying it to new items and services, a proposal
that LePage argues will lure wealthy retirees and seasonal inhabitants to make
Maine their primary domicile. The tax migration theory has been challenged by
Democrats, but LePage attempted to hit back in his weekly radio address,
arguing that the state’s income tax was adopted by former Democratic Gov. Ken
Curtis, who now lives in Florida.
“Meanwhile, remember who introduced the income tax here in
Maine,” LePage said. “Well, today former Governor Ken Curtis lives in Florida
where there is zero income tax. Stephen King and Roxanne Quimby have moved
away, as well.”
The governor is correct about Curtis. However, his
suggestion that King doesn’t live in Maine or pay income taxes here is
incorrect. On Thursday, King, the author of 55 novels, many with a horror
theme, sent a response to The Pulse AM 620 radio station in Bangor, which he
owns, to set the record straight.
“Governor LePage is full of the stuff that makes the grass
grow green,” King said. “Tabby (King’s wife, Tabitha) and I pay every cent of
our Maine state income taxes, and are glad to do it. We feel, as Governor
LePage apparently does not, that much is owed from those to whom much has been
given. We see our taxes as a way of paying back the state that has given us so
much. State taxes pay for state services. There’s just no way around it.
Governor LePage needs to remember there ain’t no free lunch.”
King has long been an evangelist of taxing the rich,
including himself. In 2012, he wrote a column for The Daily Beast entitled "Tax Me, for F@%&’s Sake!"
King endorsed former U.S. Rep. Mike Michaud during the 2014
gubernatorial race and has hosted fundraisers for other Democratic candidates.
He was among the top individual Maine political donors last year, giving
$60,700 to Democratic candidates and committees, according to records at the
Maine Commission on Governmental Ethics and Election Practices and the Federal
Election Commission.
Paul LePage
Paul
LePage is the Maine state government
governor, and a member of the Republican
Governors Association.
Note: George J. Mitchell
was the Maine state government
governor, was the Mideast envoy for the Barack
Obama administration, and the chair emeritus for the International Crisis Group.
Javier
Solana is a board member for the International
Crisis Group, a director at the Human
Rights Watch, and a trustee at the Aspen
Institute (think tank).
George
Soros is a board member for the International
Crisis Group, was a benefactor for the Human
Rights Watch, and the chairman for the Foundation
to Promote Open Society.
Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the Human Rights Watch, the Aspen
Institute (think tank), the Brookings
Institution (think tank), and the Urban
Institute (think tank).
David
H. Koch is a trustee at the Aspen
Institute (think tank), and was a major donor for the Republican Governors Association.
Leslie
H. Wexner was a lifetime trustee at the Aspen Institute (think tank), and a major donor for the Republican Governors Association.
Trevor
Potter was a fellow at the Brookings
Institution (think tank), and the chairman for the Federal Election Commission (FEC).
Susan
E. Tifft was a public affairs director for the Urban Institute (think tank), and the press secretary for the Federal Election Commission (FEC).
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