Washington Income Tax Repeal Effort Gains Momentum + WA Drought Debate Intensifies as Experts Clash
The Center Square YT
•May 19th, 2026
DESCRIPTION
Washington’s political and economic battles over the newly enacted millionaire’s income tax are intensifying as Let’s Go Washington reports overwhelming public interest in its repeal initiative campaign.
During Tuesday’s episode of Washington In Focus Daily, Center Square reporter Carleen Johnson examined:
The rapidly expanding repeal effort
Business concerns surrounding the income tax
Ongoing constitutional questions
Washington’s growing drought debate
New climate change projections
⚖️ TOP STORY: INCOME TAX REPEAL CAMPAIGN EXPANDS
One week after launching the initiative drive to repeal Washington’s newly enacted income tax, Let’s Go Washington says public response has exceeded expectations.
The organization is attempting to qualify Initiative to the People 2066-45 for the ballot by gathering:
➡️ At least 309,000 valid voter signatures
➡️ Within a 51-day signature window
Organizers reportedly hope to collect closer to:
➡️ 400,000 signatures
to account for invalid or duplicate signatures.
According to Let’s Go Washington:
“They’ve never had a response like this.”
💰 BUILDING INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION JOINS REPEAL EFFORT
The Building Industry Association of Washington has formally partnered with Let’s Go Washington in support of the repeal initiative.
BIAW Executive Vice President Greg Lane argued:
The tax could negatively impact economic growth
Construction businesses structured as LLCs may face unexpected tax burdens
The law could eventually expand beyond millionaires
Lane warned:
“This is only the beginning.”
He also argued:
Washington families and employers could face broader income taxes in the future
The measure threatens long-term economic competitiveness
Public frustration surrounding the law remains significant
⚖️ CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTIONS REMAIN
Meanwhile, supporters of the income tax continue defending the measure.
Economic Opportunity Institute policy associate Anika Klick told Washington In Focus Daily:
➡️ Courts will ultimately determine constitutionality
➡️ The legal dispute centers heavily around whether income is considered property under Washington law
➡️ Supporters are preparing for a potential ballot fight
Klick acknowledged:
The issue could reach voters either in 2026 or later
Legal and political battles are expected to continue
🌧️ DROUGHT DEBATE DIVIDES EXPERTS
The episode also highlighted sharp disagreements over Washington’s potential drought emergency.
UW atmospheric sciences professor Cliff Mass argued:
➡️ Reservoirs are currently full
➡️ Historical conditions do not support a severe drought scenario
➡️ State drought declarations are being overstated
Mass stated:
“There’s never been a situation with full reservoirs where agriculture faced devastating impacts.”
Meanwhile, Deputy State Climatologist Karin Bumbaco defended the state’s warnings, arguing:
Junior water users could still face restrictions
Conditions may worsen later in the summer
State law allows proactive drought declarations
The disagreement reflects broader statewide debates involving:
Climate policy
Water management
Agriculture
Environmental forecasting
🌍 CLIMATE CHANGE PROJECTIONS ALSO SHIFTING
The episode also referenced new reporting indicating scientists are revising downward some of the most severe long-term climate warming projections previously used in policymaking.
According to reporting discussed during the program:
Earlier “worst-case” warming scenarios are now viewed as less likely
Investments in renewable energy may be contributing to lower projected emissions growth
The discussion tied into broader questions surrounding:
Washington climate policy
Energy costs
Cap-and-invest programs
State emissions goals
📊 WHY THIS MATTERS
This impacts:
Taxes
Businesses
Agriculture
Water policy
Climate regulation
Washington’s economy
The income tax repeal effort and broader economic debates are quickly becoming central political issues heading into the 2026 election cycle.
📅 WHAT’S NEXT
Signature gathering continues statewide
Constitutional lawsuits remain active
Water supply monitoring continues into summer
Climate and emissions policy debates expected to intensify
🔔 Subscribe for continuing coverage of Washington politics, taxes, agriculture, climate policy, and government accountability.
#WashingtonState #IncomeTax #Politics #Climate #Drought #Business #Taxes #Agriculture #BreakingNews #USNews
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