[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 55 (Monday, April 22, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2832-S2833]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MARKETPLACE FAIRNESS ACT
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, over the last few months I have come to the
floor several times to discuss the need for the Senate to return to
regular order. If the last several years taught us anything, it is that
efforts to force legislation through the Senate without full and fair
consideration tend to yield unsatisfying results.
Complaints about the lack of bipartisanship have more or less become
the norm around here, and we hear all the time about the desire for the
so-called grand bargains. Bipartisan agreements don't just happen. I
think we would all agree grand bargains cannot be made out of thin air.
Luckily the Senate already has a system in place for fostering these
types of agreements. It is called regular order. Yet today the Senate
will vote on cloture on the motion to proceed to the so-called
Marketplace Fairness Act, and in doing so, the Senate will once again
abandon regular order in favor of the whims of the Senate Democratic
leadership. This is a bill that falls under the jurisdiction of the
Senate Finance Committee, but the committee has not had a markup on the
bill. Instead the Marketplace Fairness Act is just the latest in a long
line of bills brought before the full Senate without due consideration
in the committee of jurisdiction.
This has become far too common. I understand there are those who feel
strongly about this legislation, and I admire them and respect the
sponsors of the bill who worked hard to address what they see as a
major problem with our Nation's tax policy.
However, that simply is not enough to justify yet another abdication
of the committee process here in the Senate.
The Senate is organized into various committees of jurisdiction so
Members are able to develop and utilize their own expertise on specific
issues. When a piece of legislation goes through the committee process,
it is thoroughly vetted and examined. This provides an opportunity to
resolve technical issues and address various concerns before the bill
is brought to the floor for a vote.
Regular order is not a process designed to protect the power of
committee chairmen and ranking members. We have regular order and our
committee structure so we have an organized way of ensuring our
constituents are fully represented and to make sure the legislation we
pass is technically sound. The legislation we will be voting on today
is a perfect example of the importance of regular order.
The Marketplace Fairness Act is a bill that will have a significant
impact on millions of consumers and businesses throughout the country,
and clearly, this is no trifling matter.
Most reasonable people would agree that a bill of this magnitude
would benefit from full and fair committee consideration, including a
markup with an open debate and an opportunity to vote on amendments
before it is brought to the floor. However, being reasonable doesn't
appear to be part of the equation on the floor today.
I want to stress I am not fundamentally opposed to this legislation.
My goal is not to stop it at all costs. Instead, I simply want to
ensure it is fully vetted and examined. I know if all sides are able to
look at this in a dispassionate way, we might find ways of bringing all
sides together, and that is not going to happen the way it is being
done now. Therefore, today's vote is, in my view at least, as much a
vote on regular order as it is a vote on the underlying bill.
That said, I do have specific concerns about the legislation as it is
currently drafted. To begin with, the Marketplace Fairness Act in its
current form is a fairly short 11 pages long. This bill essentially
provides two avenues for States to compel remote sellers or out-of-
State businesses to collect and remit sales and use taxes. Under the
bill, the State may either meet specified minimum requirements or be a
member State under the Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement, as long
as the minimum requirements are met under the agreement.
The Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement is a good deal more
complicated than the Marketplace Fairness Act. For starters, at 203
pages, the agreement is about 18 times longer. Since its adoption on
November 12, 2002, the Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement has been
amended 28 times, most recently last year. It is not a simple little
problem here.
The streamlined sales tax governing board has done excellent work in
bringing States together to cooperatively and voluntarily address the
issues of sales and use tax complexity and administration, just to
mention a few issues.
According to the streamlined sales tax governing board, 24 States
have adopted the simplification measures in the agreement, representing
31 percent of the population.
The authors of the Marketplace Fairness Act hope to apply its
measures to all 50 States and 100 percent of the population.
However, the bill is comparatively short on details. For example, the
Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement contains provisions on rules
for the sourcing of sales, along with exclusions to those rules. In
order to levy the appropriate sales tax, the location and subject
matter of the transaction must be determined. This level of detail is
not present in the Marketplace Fairness Act.
It is unclear if the floor established on sourcing requirements under
this bill is sufficient to protect consumers from unintended
consequences. For example, I have received a letter from the American
Society of Pension Professionals and Actuaries which is worried that
this legislation ``would allow states to impose a financial transaction
tax that would apply to American workers' 401(k) contributions and
other transactions within workers' accounts.''
Another concern I have with the current version of the Marketplace
Fairness Act is that it contains a preemption clause which could make
it possible for States to expand the reach of their sales taxes through
creative legislating. The Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement at
least provides an avenue for the input of multiple States. The States
that are not subject to the agreement would, under this bill, be able
to legislate knowing that the Federal Government will compel
enforcement of their tax law on nonresidents.
I am concerned with the transition costs that will come with this
legislation for retailers who have been operating in an environment
where they have not been required to collect and remit sales taxes for
States where they do not have a physical presence. This legislation
would change that almost in an instant.
Before we enact a new sales tax system, we need to take into account
the costs that system will impose on businesses of all sizes and the
difficulties these companies will face as they adapt to the new regime.
For example, there is the issue of vendor compensation. The
Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement currently includes a provision
giving States the opportunity to voluntarily compensate remote sellers
``as a measure of good faith'' for registering to voluntarily collect
and remit sales taxes into States where the seller has no physical
presence. This is included in the agreement because under the current
law remote sellers are generally not required to collect and remit the
sales tax, and they incur a cost when they do so.
The Marketplace Fairness Act does not include any provision for
compensation of remote sellers. I believe this is something we must
take into account and examine even more thoroughly. I am also concerned
about the small-seller exemption in the bill which would exempt sellers
with national remote sales of less than $1 million from the new
requirements to collect and withhold sales taxes. This seems like an
important concession, but it is not without its problems.
First of all, the cap on the exemption is not indexed to inflation. I
think anyone who has observed any part of the roughly 50-year process
where the alternative minimum tax has grown from a fairness measure
targeting the rich to an ever-increasing burden on the middle class
should understand how inflation can radically distort policy outcomes
over a period of time. In addition, there are many who argue that the
$1 million exemption may be too low. In my view, these are concerns we
need to fully consider before bringing the bill to the floor.
Finally, I want to point out that the bill does not include a
provision for a
[[Page S2833]]
dispute resolution venue. Ideally the bill would give Federal district
courts exclusive jurisdiction in matters concerning the implementation
of this legislation. Policy changes with such far-reaching effects
inevitably lead to unexpected issues and consequences. Giving Federal
courts this jurisdiction would ensure greater uniformity and
application of this legislation across the country.
These are only a few of the concerns I have regarding the Marketplace
Fairness Act. I don't believe these are necessarily fundamental
concerns, but they are issues that need to be addressed.
I am quite certain that, if given an opportunity, the Finance
Committee could address these issues without inexorably changing the
underlying purpose of the bill. However, if we proceed with floor
debate on the Marketplace Fairness Act as is, we will not have that
opportunity.
The Senate simply cannot continue to operate this way. Once again, we
need to restore the deliberative traditions of the Senate, and that
means a return to regular order.
I know a number of my colleagues have expressed similar concerns
about the need to restore the committee process in the Senate. I hope
they will join with me in voting no on cloture on the motion to proceed
to the Marketplace Fairness Act. This doesn't necessarily determine how
I am going to vote on the final analysis of this, but I sure as heck
would like to approach this in a much more intelligent and
legislatively profound way than we are doing here tonight.
By the way, we can talk about the fairness of this thing, but there
are a lot of stakeholders that are not quite convinced this is as fair
as those who are supporting the bill actually claim.
I hope we can have a more deliberative process to examine these
matters. The distinguished chairman of the committee has offered to
have a hearing on the bill, mark up the bill, and consider it in a
regular-order approach in the immediate future as soon as we get back
from this next recess. Frankly, I think that is a pretty good offer,
and it is one we ought to honor if we honor our committee structure in
the Senate.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, I understand that unanimous consent was
given earlier to have printed in the Record an op-ed from the Wall
Street Journal by Arthur B. Laffer entitled ``Tax Internet Sales
Stimulate Growth.''
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. Laffer, as most Americans know, is a distinguished
economist. People sometimes said he was President Reagan's favorite
economist. He makes the argument that many conservatives and many
Governors across the country make, which is: Give us the authority to
make these decisions for ourselves. We will collect taxes from
everybody who already owes the taxes by requiring sellers to collect
the taxes whether they are in State or out of State, and then we will
lower the tax rate.
Mr. Laffer says fairness legislation that collects taxes from
everyone who owes it and then lowers the tax rate is better for
economic growth, which is something our country desperately needs.
Mr. President, I also ask unanimous consent to have printed in the
Record the comments supporting specifically the legislation from Al
Cardenas, chairman of the American Conservative Union, Governor Mike
Pence of Indiana, and former Governor Mitch Daniels of Indiana.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
Conservatives Support Marketplace Fairness
AL CARDENAS, Chairman of the American Conservative Union
``When it comes to state sales taxes, it is time to address
the area where federally mandated prejudice is most
egregious--the policy toward Internet sales, the decades old
inequity between online and in-person sales as outdated and
unfair.''
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE
``I don't think Congress should be in the business of
picking winners and losers. Inaction by Congress today
results in a system today, that does pick winners and
losers.''
GOVERNOR MITCH DANIELS
``Sales taxes that states impose ought to be paid, and paid
by everybody equally and collected by everybody in the retail
business . . . We're not talking about an additional or new
tax here--we're talking about the collection of a tax that's
existed a long time.''
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, what is the parliamentary situation?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. We are in morning business for 1 more minute
and then morning business will be closed and we will proceed to the
motion under the agreement.
Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I will take that 1 minute, please.
This is pretty simple. This legislation is new and only recently
introduced. It has never been vetted. Others have but not this
legislation. This bill is fraught with all kinds of problems, some of
which have already been enumerated on the floor. There are many
unintended circumstances.
The only right thing to do is to permit this to go back to the
committee so the committee can take it up. As chairman of the
committee, I have made that promise many times. We have already had
hearings. We will have a markup on this bill in the next work period. A
markup means there will be a vote. I stand here ready to abide by the
vote. I submit right now that the majority of the Members of the
committee maybe will let us work this thing. I don't know. But that is
the process. That is what we should be doing, not just ramming this
thing through, which is so complex. There are so many unintended
consequences. Many of the consequences have been enumerated and not
addressed but could be addressed and would be addressed in a proper
committee forum.
I yield the floor.
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