The Rob Kendall Show
Today’s episode of The Rob Kendall Show opens with Governor Braun once again suspending Indiana’s two gas taxes: the sales tax on gas and the separate gas excise tax. Rob says the move will save drivers about 62.5 cents per gallon, but argues the bigger story is that the suspension proves how much taxes drive up the cost of basic necessities. He says Republicans are only pausing the taxes now because people are paying attention to high gas prices and because the issue is hurting Trump politically. Rob also points to Indiana’s large reserve fund as proof that Hoosiers are being overtaxed. He argues the state can absorb more than $100 million a month in lost gas tax revenue because it has collected far more money than it needed, while still raising taxes last year after inaccurate revenue forecasts. Rob says the gas tax has always been a money grab, and that suspending it temporarily does not fix the larger problem. The show also examines whether Braun even has the legal authority to keep extending the gas tax suspension without action from the General Assembly. Rob argues the law appears to allow only one renewal of the emergency order, but says Braun is likely moving forward because no one is going to sue to make gas more expensive. He criticizes Attorney General Todd Rokita for staying silent on the legal question while Republican leaders praise the move politically. Another major segment focuses on Shelbyville Mayor Scott Ferguson, who was caught on video insulting residents with “no data center” signs in their yards. Rob says the mayor’s comments show open disdain for working-class people and renters who are concerned about a massive proposed data center project in their community. He argues residents have every right to question how a 429-acre, 11-building data center complex could change the look, feel, resources, and future of Shelbyville. The episode closes with Rob using the Shelbyville controversy to make a broader point about politicians and public accountability. He says the mayor’s apology sounded more like regret over getting caught than a real apology to residents. Rob also says Indiana needs a serious statewide framework for data centers that protects communities, taxpayers, water, utilities, and local finances instead of leaving each city to fight these battles on its own. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]
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