[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 62 (Monday, May 6, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3077-S3079]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ORDER OF PROCEDURE
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the 20
minutes prior to the vote, which is scheduled at 5:30, in relation to
amendment No. 741 be equally divided between the proponents and
opponents, with proponents controlling the final 10 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. DURBIN. Thank you, Mr. President.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.
Mr. CRUZ. Mr. President, I rise today to speak out against the so-
called Marketplace Fairness Act. In my view, during a time of economic
challenge, as we are in today, the very top priority of every elected
official, whether Republican or Democrat, should be to restore economic
growth, to get our economy moving, to get back to the economic
dynamism, the economic strength that has lifted so many millions out of
poverty and toward the American dream. This bill, if enacted into law,
would hurt economic growth and would be a mistake.
First of all, more taxes will hurt economic growth, and this bill, if
enacted, would in effect create a national Internet sales tax. It would
subject small online retailers to paying taxes in 9,600 different
jurisdictions all across this country. At a time when so many are
hurting, we should be discussing how to reduce regulatory burdens on
small businesses and how to reduce tax burdens on small businesses, how
to reduce the complexity of taxes on small businesses, and this bill
goes in exactly the opposite direction.
In particular, those who will be hurt the most by this bill if it is
passed are small mom-and-pop retailers online. The threshold for this
bill is $1 million in gross online sales. That is not profit; that is
$1 million in total sales, gross sales, and $1 million for a starting
business is not a terribly high threshold for their gross, not their
profits. That has to cover the costs and all expenses of the business.
It has to cover any salary, any rent, any Web costs, communications,
travel, accounting, legal services, plus the costs of goods sold. These
small- and medium-sized businesses would suddenly find themselves
subject to 46 different States and 9,600 local jurisdictions. They
would find themselves having to pay tax filings, potentially, in all 46
States monthly or quarterly and to be subjected, potentially, to audits
from each of these local counties, each of these local municipalities.
I have with me here today a listing of all of the tax rates of these
9,600 different jurisdictions. It is truly indecipherable, that you can
look and pick any State and get the county and see the different tax
rates. Indeed, in a lot of counties--for example, I just opened this at
random. In Colorado--which I happened to open it to--if you look in
Taylor Park, if it happens to come from the 81210 ZIP Code, the tax
rate is 4.5 percent, but if it is in the same county that comes from
the 81230 ZIP Code, the tax rate is 8.25 percent.
Small businesses--a small mom-and-pop just getting started on the
Internet would be required to comply with all of these taxing
jurisdictions, to send the taxes to all of these taxing jurisdictions,
and to be subject, potentially, to audits from 9,600 taxing
jurisdictions. That makes no sense.
I wish to point out also that this is not fundamentally about
fairness. The proponents of this act point to small mom-and-pop stores
that are their bricks-and-mortar retailers. But those are not the main
proponents of these bills. A small bricks-and-mortar retailer right now
is losing sales primarily to two different sources: No. 1, big-box
bricks-and-mortar retailers. They are losing a lot of sales to big-box
large retailers. This bill does nothing about that. No. 2, they are
losing substantial sales to large online retailers, the giant
corporations.
But here is an interesting statistic. Nine of the ten largest
Internet retailers are already paying sales taxes in all 46 States that
have sales taxes. Why? Because they have a physical presence in the
State.
What the Supreme Court has said is, if you are physically in a State,
the State can force you to collect its tax. But if you are not
physically there, the Constitution does not let you haul someone in
from a distant State and force them to collect your taxes because you
do not have any accountability to those individuals in a distant State.
In terms of the small mom-and-pop retailers, they are losing their
sales to the big-box and big Internet retailers, all of whom are
already paying these taxes.
So what do we have here? We have a bipartisan coalition,
unfortunately, that it appears is going to pass this bill in this
Senate. But the coalition is driven by the fact that you have big
business united. You have the big business bricks-and-mortar companies
and the big business online retailers all together because the impact
of this bill is to hammer the small business online retailers, to make
it harder for the little guys to compete. So you see a strange alliance
here in Washington, but one that I think is exactly backwards of what
we ought to be doing.
I think it is fundamentally unfair to ask a Texas business to collect
taxes for California Governor Jerry Brown or for New York City Mayor
Bloomberg and a nanny State, in particular, because they cannot hold
those politicians accountable. They do not have a presence there. They
do not vote there. They do not have influence there. But yet they are
being dragooned into collecting those taxes. I think that is
fundamentally not right.
Let me give you an example of how this will hurt small businesses.
There is a woman in Texas named Ann Whitley Wood who wrote a letter to
our office. She lives in Dallas and had created an online consignment
store. Even though it is largely a one-person operation, she may come
close to doing $1
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million in sales--which, keep in mind, are not profits; those are gross
sales. Her letter said:
Legislators must understand that it is both possible and
common for a small seller like me to reach about $1 million
in sales with a near-one person operation.
She estimates it could take her 6 weeks a year to comply with the
sales tax procedures for all of the collecting States. That impact on a
small business is crushing. A giant corporation has accountants, has
lawyers, has people designed to deal with that. For a small business,
it hits them in particular.
I point out even more fundamentally, the Internet has been this
incredible haven of entrepreneurial freedom. It has enabled people to
start businesses with nothing, out of their garage, and sell all over
the world. It has transformed the ability for single moms and Hispanics
and African Americans and people with nothing to go and start a
business. Because it used to be that you needed this big distribution
network, you needed warehouses, you needed trucks, you needed all of
this, so it was difficult for someone to start a small business.
The Internet has transformed all of that. There are 2.3 million
Hispanic small business owners. The Internet has been critical to their
being able to open those small businesses because it lets them
communicate with the world and get their products out.
I believe the Senate should treat the Internet as a safe haven, that
it should be treated as free from taxes and regulations that would
hamper the entrepreneurial spirit and make it harder for the little
guy, for small business to be created, to grow, and thrive. When they
become gigantic corporations, they will have a physical presence in the
State, and then they will be subject to the taxes. But do not hit them
when they are getting started on the Internet. I think it would be
absolutely foolish to do anything to impinge on the entrepreneurial
freedom of the Internet.
In conclusion, I want to say three very simple things.
No. 1, in my judgment, we should not be taxing the Internet, period.
No. 2, we should not be increasing the burdens on small businesses,
particularly at a time of economic challenge, period. And, No. 3, we
should not be favoring politicians and big business at the expense of
the little guy, at the expense of the single mom trying to start a
small business to feed her kid, at the expense of the Hispanic
immigrant trying to start a small business and work toward the American
dream.
We should not be standing with politicians looking for more tax
revenue and big businesses looking to make it harder for their
competitors to survive. Instead, we should stand up with the little
guy, the small business, with the American people.
I urge the Senate to reject this bill. If the Senate does pass it, I
would urge the House to listen to the American people and reject the
bill as well.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I think we only have 2 or 3 minutes before
the 20-minute period that has been reserved equally for both sides. I
wish to use those 3 minutes to respond directly to my colleague from
the State of Texas.
The first thing he says is, do not tax the Internet. Good news. I
just went through the entire bill. There is no tax on the Internet in
the bill, none. So we have taken care of point No. 1. In fact, we
wanted to add the Internet Freedom Act here, which would have said
expressly: We will continue the prohibition against tax on the
Internet, and it was objected to by one of the opponents of this bill.
The second thing he says is, do not put a burden on small businesses.
I would say to my friend from Texas, what about the small business that
does not have Internet sales?
You have just put a burden on them because they cannot compete with
Internet retailers that do not collect sales taxes.
I might say also, when it comes to small business exemptions, we
exempt those with sales of $1 million or less in the previous year.
That exempts 99 percent of all Internet retailers. The small
businesses--the Hispanic and non-Hispanic businesses--collect sales
taxes in Texas on the first dollar of sales. We exempt $1 million in
sales for their competitors in Internet retail.
The final thing the Senator says is, do not favor large businesses.
The coalition supporting this bill includes the smallest businesses,
the mom-and-pop businesses. Of course, it includes the big-box stores
and the big chains. But it goes all the way down the line. They are all
in competition.
What we have put in here, with this exemption, exempts 99 percent of
all online retailers. When the Senator says he looks at 9,600 different
taxing jurisdictions and cannot figure out how in the world we are ever
going to figure this out, I refer him to page 3 of the bill. Please
start reading at line 14 through 24, where you will see that we
expressly provide there must be a single entity within the State
responsible for all State and local sales. So you are not going to have
9,600. You are going to have, at most, 45 separate entities--the 45
States with sales taxes--as well as audits; one audit from the State, a
single audit.
We do not want to put a burden on any businesses--large, small,
Internet or not--but we do want to level the playing field.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, there will now be 20
minutes of debate equally divided.
Who yields time?
If no one yields time, the time will be charged equally.
The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. DURBIN. Parliamentary inquiry: I believe the order suggests that
the time is equally divided between the opponents and proponents, and
the opponents have the first 10 minutes and the proponents the final 10
minutes. So I would ask the Chair to clarify his ruling.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
The Senator from New Hampshire.
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Mr. President, I come to the floor again this afternoon
to continue my opposition and concerns about the Internet sales tax
legislation that has been submitted.
I appreciate that we are going to vote on this bill in a few minutes,
and I appreciate that I am probably going to lose. But I do think it is
important to raise these concerns again because I think we have to take
a look at the issues that have been raised and see if there are any
ways to address them.
There are a number of problems with the bill that in my State of New
Hampshire--which has no sales tax--makes it anything but fair. In fact,
it creates an unfair situation for small businesses in a number of
ways.
First, it is unfair for businesses in my State of New Hampshire and
the four other States in this country that do not collect a sales tax.
We did not have an opportunity to address this issue through
amendments. I think it is not fair for us to pass a bill out of the
Senate that fundamentally makes an impact on businesses in States where
we have no ability to address the imposition of these taxes.
I also think we should not pass a bill that is going to create
unnecessary new redtape for small companies across the country. One of
the real benefits of the Internet has been the innovation and the job
creation it has spawned. What this legislation does is put in place
redtape that is going to put small companies that sell online at a
severe disadvantage, making it harder for them to compete with large
online retailers.
As a former small business owner myself, I know how time consuming
regulations and compliance can be. Make no mistake about it, we are
creating a bureaucratic morass for small businesses under this
legislation. Small companies will be looking at complying with 46
different State laws. They are going to face audits or lawsuits,
potentially, in some of these States.
Small business owners, who are working hard to grow their companies,
do not need additional paperwork to distract them from running their
companies. I fear that is what this bill will create. I urge my
colleagues to take another look and see how we can address those
concerns.
I yield the floor.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, the Marketplace Fairness Act is designed to
address a simple problem--a significant loss in States' sales tax
revenues arising from e-commerce.
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Generally, retail businesses are required to collect and remit sales
and use taxes on qualifying merchandise or services. While most States
require consumers to remit use taxes for purchases from out-of-State
vendors, compliance is extraordinarily low as States cannot legally
mandate the collection and remittance of taxes by a business unless the
business has a physical presence in the State.
This restriction, which was articulated in the 1992 Supreme Court
case, Quill Corp. v. North Dakota, went so far as to invite Congress to
address the issue. It is time we do that.
In an era of unprecedented e-commerce, Congress's failure so far to
address this problem unfairly deprives State treasuries of much-needed
tax revenue because Internet-based retailers are not required to charge
sales tax to their out-of-State customers. As you might imagine, a
large number of State governments have asked for this legislation to
fix that problem, including the current Republican Governor of
Michigan. In fact, Michigan governors of both political parties have
asked Congress to pass this important piece of legislation, and I agree
with them.
The Governor of Michigan says that passing this law will help the
State of Michigan collect more than $800 million over the next 2 years.
Those are revenues that the State desperately needs.
I also think it's important to keep in mind some of the things this
bill doesn't do. This bill does not authorize the States to create
State-level financial transaction taxes, as some have erroneously
argued. In fact, the Marketplace Fairness Act does not create, endorse,
or recommend new Federal, State or local taxes of any kind.
This bill gives States the option of pursuing collection authority by
simplifying their tax structure, but States can also choose to do
nothing differently than they do today. The Marketplace Fairness Act is
about more equitably collecting taxes that are already owed.
Over the past decade, many States have worked together to develop a
framework to harmonize sales and use tax collection and remittance,
known as the Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement. Michigan is 1 of
the 24 States that currently participate in that agreement. But, in
order for the agreement to be legally enforceable, Congress would need
to enact legislation granting States the authority to require out-of-
State merchants to remit sales and use taxes. This bill would do that.
I support this effort to simplify and improve sales tax collection,
and I am a cosponsor of this bill. This bill will level the playing
field between on-line retailers and those with ``brick and mortar''
stores, ensuring that we do not give an unfair tax advantage to one
type of retailer over another. This is about ensuring that our States
have the ability to collect the taxes they need to fund schools, and
law enforcement, and other key priorities.
I will vote for this bill, and I urge my colleagues to do the same.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois
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