The Maine Wire
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending News
  • Augusta Residents Can Air Their Greviances About Homelessness Problems in Upcoming Forum
  • Lewiston Council Finalizes Municipal Budget One Week After Voters Reject School Spending Plan
  • Fraudulent Massachusetts Healthcare Biller Will Pay Penalty But Faces No Jailtime
  • Mills Orders Flags Lowered to Honor Three Fallen Maine Public Servants
  • ATF, State Fire Marshal Continue Complex Investigation into Deadly Robbins Lumber Explosion
  • DOJ Threatens Maine Over ICE Undercover Plates as Bellows Fires Back
  • Vance Says Trump Administration Will Keep Targeting Fraud, Pushes Iran Toward Nuclear Deal
  • Collins and King Join Democratic Senators in Calling for Federal Gov’t to Release $360M in Weatherization Funds
Facebook Twitter Instagram
The Maine Wire
Wednesday, May 20
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
The Maine Wire
Home » News » Featured » Maine Democrats Push Late-Night ‘Millionaire’s Tax’ in Budget Move, Drawing Sharp GOP Backlash
Featured

Maine Democrats Push Late-Night ‘Millionaire’s Tax’ in Budget Move, Drawing Sharp GOP Backlash

Jon FetherstonBy Jon FetherstonApril 1, 2026Updated:April 1, 202612 Comments4 Mins Read2K Views
Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

AUGUSTA, Maine – Maine Democrats moved late Tuesday night to add a new “millionaire’s tax” to their supplemental budget proposal, prompting immediate backlash from Republicans who say the measure is just the latest example of rushed, partisan lawmaking in Augusta. The amendment came from the Democratic majority on the Legislature’s Appropriations and Financial Affairs Committee as lawmakers assembled the broader spending package for possible action on Wednesday, April 1.

The proposal would impose an additional 2 percent income tax surcharge on wealthy Mainers, applying to the portion of a resident’s taxable income beyond $1 million for single filers, $1.5 million for heads of household, and $1.5 million for people filing jointly. The idea was originally introduced in a separate bill, LD 1089, before being folded into the budget process. Supporters have said the tax could generate roughly $64 million to $75 million annually for K-12 education.

Republicans blasted both the policy and the process.

https://www.facebook.com/share/r/1CU3Y5cak7

“Hey folks, this is Trey Stewart, the Republican leader in the Maine State Senate, just wanted to give you a little update on what catastrophe is brewing here in Augusta,” Stewart said in a message posted after the late-night committee action on Social Media.

Stewart accused Democrats of moving “under the cloak of darkness” to push forward new taxes on high earners and businesses, while refusing to confront what Republicans have repeatedly described as fraud, waste, and misplaced spending in state government.

“Now the Democrats last night quite literally under the cloak of darkness decided to move forward attacks on anybody, including businesses by the way with revenues over $1 million here in the state of Maine,” Stewart said.

He argued the proposal reflects the same tax-and-spend mindset seen in other blue states, warning that Maine is moving toward the same kind of economic policy that has driven frustration elsewhere.

“This is the same sort of craziness that you’re seeing in places like Washington that are literally causing people to flee those states in droves,” Stewart said.

Say NO to a tax hike TODAY: https://t.co/2VU0fj2PhU https://t.co/hsMch2dkSm

— Rep. Laurel Libby (@laurel_libby) April 1, 2026

The late-night tax push has already fueled criticism that Augusta Democrats are again using the budget process to advance major fiscal changes with limited public scrutiny. For opponents, the issue is not just the tax increase itself, but the broader pattern of using late-hour negotiations to push controversial policy through the Legislature.

Stewart also tied the tax hike to what Republicans say is a larger failure by the Democratic majority to rein in waste, fraud, and questionable spending.

“At the same time they’re raiding the rainy day fund, they’re spending millions of dollars of your tax money on a variety of programs that just don’t make any sense at all that we know are fraud, with fraud and have been pushing and pushing against here for the last few months that we’ve been in session since these reports have come out,” Stewart said.

He said lawmakers are moving ahead without meaningful accountability measures, even as concerns continue to mount over how taxpayer dollars are being spent.

“There’s no accountability. There’s nothing there that’s gonna make sure that your money is actually needed,” Stewart said. “Instead they’re gonna attack you even more. They’re gonna not do anything to address the rampant fraud across Maine, and apparently they’re gonna do so on an entirely party line basis.”

The new Maine proposal is also likely to revive comparisons to Massachusetts, where voters approved a 4 percent surtax on taxable income above $1 million beginning in tax year 2023. For tax year 2025, Massachusetts says that surtax threshold rose to $1,083,150.

Supporters of the Massachusetts policy point to the revenue. The state reported that fiscal year 2025 revenue collections totaled about $43.7 billion, up roughly $2.9 billion from the prior year, with surtax receipts contributing to that increase.

But critics say that is only part of the story. New IRS migration data released in March 2026 show Massachusetts posted a net outflow of nearly 30,000 people and about $4.2 billion in adjusted gross income in the 2022-2023 period, figures that have sharpened concerns that high earners and investment are leaving for lower-tax states.

At the same time, the broader population picture in Massachusetts is more complicated than a simple collapse narrative. U.S. Census estimates show the state’s population rose from 7,136,171 on July 1, 2024, to 7,154,084 on July 1, 2025.

Even so, opponents of Maine’s proposal argue the Massachusetts experience still offers a warning. They contend that millionaire-tax policies can create volatility, encourage wealth migration, and make states less competitive over time, even when they produce short-term revenue gains. In their view, Maine Democrats are now reaching for the same playbook.

Previous ArticleMaine Bass Seasonal Fishing Tournaments Gearing Up With Word To The Wise: Don’t Stalk The Competition
Next Article Supreme Court Hears Oral Arguments in Birthright Citizenship Case With President Trump in Attendance
Jon Fetherston

Latest News

Augusta Residents Can Air Their Greviances About Homelessness Problems in Upcoming Forum

May 20, 2026

Lewiston Council Finalizes Municipal Budget One Week After Voters Reject School Spending Plan

May 20, 2026

Fraudulent Massachusetts Healthcare Biller Will Pay Penalty But Faces No Jailtime

May 20, 2026
0 0 votes
Article Rating
12 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Mike
Mike
1 month ago

how many wealthy mainers also have homes in other states. They’ll just claim residency in that other state.

11
Tervis
Tervis
1 month ago

More liberal fraud

6
axylos
axylos
1 month ago

Idiots!!!! What do you idiotic Marxist-DemocRATs think people with money are going to do? Leave and change their residency!!! Then keep the house here as a second home and utilize non-residency to save tax dollars!!!

Maine voters prove every single election how dumb they are, I use to think it was apathy, but now I know it’s dumb. Prove me wrong!!!

6
JMGB
JMGB
1 month ago

Like Margaret Thatcher once says, “The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of otter people’s money!”

7
Chris
Chris
1 month ago

Keep voting for these people Maine and nothing is going to change. The decline will continue. I don’t like being negative but I don’t see it being any other way. I’ve lived in Maine my entire life and have observed the direction in which things have gone. It’s been down mostly. Good idea, drive out the people who create businesses and pay most of the income taxes as a percentage. I feel sorry for the average Mainer working his/her ass off and getting screwed, for my kids and grandkids. It would be interesting to know the percentage of young people who leave instead of staying. I have read in the past that it’s pretty high. Sounds like a good plan, huh?

1
RWL
RWL
1 month ago

The reality is that the Democrats need to keep taxing more and more to keep up with the funding of their social programs. Change will only happen when the people of Maine wake up and stop voting for Democrats. Until that happens, don’t expect much to change in the once great State of Maine.

3
Rooster
Rooster
1 month ago

Yes people can move, but this also affects any business with a million dollars in pass through money, they will close, layoff people etc. This is a very anti business state,thanks to this one party state

2
John P
John P
1 month ago

I saw a quote the other day to the effect of, “Socialists never consider how wealth is created, only how it should be redistributed.” True enough.

3
Geoff
Geoff
1 month ago

What idiots or legislators are! Don’t they realize this will just cause more self-sufficient people to leave the state, leaving less people to find all the non self-sufficient people without funding for their fraudulent schemes to take money from the tax payers of Maine. What Blithering Morons we continue to elect!

3
George
George
1 month ago

Yup. I will officially “live” in my New Hampshire ski condo for “6 months and a day”. Has Maine not learned from Massachusetts, New York and California? These state have LOST Billions in tax revenue since implementing similar policies. New York’s governor is literally begging people to move back to NY. These “tax the rich” policies NEVER work. Please focus on reducing spend and spending more wisely. Florida has Billions in surplus.

1
SMarkB
SMarkB
1 month ago

It’s the only way democrupts do things in the dead of the night. So all the low IQ voters in the People’s Republic of Maine know even less of what’s going on.

1
Gardiner Schneider
Gardiner Schneider
1 month ago

Thanks to the Maine Wire for covering this sort of socialistic taxing. Now once this passes, and hundreds of high earning Mainers find ways to leave the state, the total “gain” from this tax may turn into a loss. Then the trick will be to lower the entry level to pay this tax to those who have an annual Family income of a hundred thousand. That will bring in a bunch more money, and give many more citizens of the state a good reason to pack up. Socialism is but a stepping stone towards the rotten bridge of Communism.

0
Recent News

Augusta Residents Can Air Their Greviances About Homelessness Problems in Upcoming Forum

May 20, 2026

Lewiston Council Finalizes Municipal Budget One Week After Voters Reject School Spending Plan

May 20, 2026

Fraudulent Massachusetts Healthcare Biller Will Pay Penalty But Faces No Jailtime

May 20, 2026

Mills Orders Flags Lowered to Honor Three Fallen Maine Public Servants

May 20, 2026

ATF, State Fire Marshal Continue Complex Investigation into Deadly Robbins Lumber Explosion

May 20, 2026
Newsletter

News

  • News
  • Campaigns & Elections
  • Opinion & Commentary
  • Media Watch
  • Education
  • Media

Maine Wire

  • About the Maine Wire
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Commentary
  • Complaints
  • Maine Policy Institute

Resources

  • Maine Legislature
  • Legislation Finder
  • Get the Newsletter
  • Maine Wire TV

Facebook Twitter Instagram Steam RSS
  • Post Office Box 7829, Portland, Maine 04112

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

wpDiscuz