House Votes: Four More Years of No Net Access Taxes

Tue Oct 16, 2007 4:50PM EDT

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Check the bill your ISP sends you every month and you'll notice there are no taxes listed on it. That's because in 1998, to bolster the then-nascent web, Congress voted to suspend taxes on Internet service. However, that law is finally set to expire on November 1. The good news is that the house has agreed to continue that suspension, at least until 2011.

By a vote of a whopping 405 to 2, the House overwhelmingly decided to extend the tax ban, though some legislators are upset that the ban wasn't made permanent. (Who voted against it? California's Anna Eshoo (pictured) and Ohio's Michael Turner. Since Eshoo is based in Silicon Valley, I have to assume she pushed the wrong button... right? Update - But seriously, Eshoo is the author of the Permanent Internet Tax Freedom Act and voted against it because she felt the bill didn't go far enough to protect consumers. Apologies for the bad joke.)

From here, the bill has to head to the Senate, and it's unclear whether the Senate will get to it before the November 1 deadline, but given the broad support the bill has, it's pretty certain it will pass sooner or later. Whether taxes will be levied beginning on November 1 if it's "later" is another question altogether.

Also note: This tax ban is not the same as the sales tax ban on merchandise sold via the web and shipped over state lines. That issue is considerably thornier, as it involves a 1992 Supreme Court ruling that exempted companies for collecting taxes in states where they don't have a physical presence. However, it's likely that situation will change somewhere down the road.

LINK: House OKs four-year extension of Net tax ban 

Comments on House Votes: Four More Years of No Net Access Taxes

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  • 6 Posted by rorbincalendar on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:51PM EDT Report Abuse

    I must say I'm shocked. I can't remember the last time a Democrat saw a tax that they didn't like.

  • 7 Posted by matelot1984 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    at last a potential victory for consumers-a rare event indeed

  • 8 Posted by wombator on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    jhg6041 said: "Being as she is from California it is not a suprise. And I'll bet she is a Liberal." Nice knee-jerk California bashing. Perhaps you're too busy to do more than skim the article, but if you look at it again, you'll notice that the reason Rep. Eshoo held out was that she wants a bill to install a PERMANENT Net tax ban. By having a ban that expires every several years, the risk of it one day not passing is real and worrisome, especially as people lose interest in it. She wants to ensure that the ban stays around for the long haul. Since you didn't immediately bash the Republican (Rep. Turner), does that mean you simply hate Democrats so much that you will automatically oppose ANY legislation they sponsor, even if you actually like it? If a net tax were instituted by some GOP folks, would you then accept it because they're Republicans..? I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt and figure you might have read this article before the update was made, but otherwise... Same goes for you, rorbincalendar. From an article on the PITFA: "The bill, H. 156, would forever prohibit three types of Internet taxes: taxes on Internet access, double taxation (for example, by two or more states) of a product or service bought over the Internet, and discriminatory taxes that treat Internet purchases differently from other types of sales." http://www.dmnews.com/cms/dm-news/e-commerce/39875.html

  • 9 Posted by rrcarter@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:53PM EDT Report Abuse

    She voted against the bill because she is in favor of a permanent tax ban and not another temporary tax ban. -- read the article.

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