Income Tax Fight Intensifies Over Court Connections
The Center Square YT
•May 22nd, 2026
DESCRIPTION
Questions surrounding Washington’s new millionaire’s income tax continue to intensify following newly released records, growing scrutiny over Supreme Court connections, and ongoing constitutional challenges tied to the controversial law.
In a new Washington In Focus discussion, investigative reporter TJ Martinell detailed attempts to question Washington Supreme Court justices regarding newly uncovered communications involving:
The Attorney General’s Office
State lawmakers
Referendum strategy
Constitutional questions surrounding income taxes
TOP STORY: NEW RECORDS FUEL LEGAL AND POLITICAL DEBATE
Martinell discussed communications tied to:
The state’s millionaire’s tax
The failed referendum effort
Internal legal strategy discussions
The tax includes a “necessity clause,” which opponents argue was inserted specifically to block a referendum vote by the public.
According to Martinell:
Former Deputy Solicitor General Carl Smith speculated in draft communications that some justices might prefer allowing a referendum to avoid ruling directly on the constitutional question of whether income is property
Washington courts have repeatedly ruled that income is property under state law
Those rulings have historically blocked progressive income taxes
Martinell attempted to ask Chief Justice Debra Stephens about those records following the ceremonial swearing-in of newly appointed Justice Theo Angelas.
According to Martinell:
“The opinions of the court speak for themselves.”
He said Stephens declined to discuss the matter further.
CONCERNS RAISED OVER COURT CONNECTIONS
A major focus of the discussion involved relationships between:
Gov. Bob Ferguson
Newly appointed justices
The Attorney General’s Office
Sen. Jamie Pedersen, sponsor of the millionaire’s tax
The conversation highlighted:
Theo Angelas previously worked with Ferguson and Pedersen at K&L Gates
Justice Colleen Melody previously worked in the Attorney General’s Office under Ferguson
Questions over whether certain justices should recuse themselves from future constitutional rulings involving the tax
Critics argue:
➡️ The close professional relationships create at minimum the appearance of potential conflicts
➡️ Judicial ethics standards require avoiding even the appearance of conflicts of interest
Supporters of the tax argue:
➡️ Legislators regularly consult attorneys when crafting legislation
➡️ Courts remain independent
➡️ Professional overlap does not automatically disqualify judges from ruling
REFERENDUM VS. INITIATIVE FIGHT
The discussion also focused heavily on:
Why the legislature used a necessity clause
Differences between referendum and initiative processes
Whether voters should have been allowed to directly challenge the tax through referendum
The Washington Supreme Court previously ruled:
Tax measures tied to the budget are generally exempt from referendum
However:
A separate constitutional challenge remains active
Let’s Go Washington is pursuing a repeal initiative
The constitutional question could eventually return to the state Supreme Court
BIGGER CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTIONS
At the center of the debate:
Whether Washington’s long-standing precedent treating income as property will remain intact
Whether courts could overturn nearly a century of precedent
How broadly lawmakers could expand future income taxes if precedent changes
Critics warn:
Overturning the precedent could open the door to broader graduated income taxes
Future legislatures could potentially raise rates substantially with simple majority votes
Supporters argue:
Washington’s current tax system is overly regressive
High-income taxes may survive modern constitutional scrutiny
Courts can revisit older precedent when appropriate
WHY THIS MATTERS
This impacts:
Washington tax policy
Constitutional law
Judicial ethics debates
Future income taxes
State politics
Ballot access questions
The millionaire’s tax fight is quickly becoming one of the most significant legal and political battles in modern Washington history.
WHAT’S NEXT
Constitutional lawsuits continue moving forward
Initiative signature gathering remains underway
Judicial recusal questions may intensify
The Washington Supreme Court could eventually decide the fate of the income tax
HASHTAGS
#WashingtonState #IncomeTax #Politics #SupremeCourt #Taxes #BreakingNews #WashingtonPolitics #Law #Constitution #USNews
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