Stacey Abrams Presses Kemp On Suspending Gas Tax Through the End of 2022

Georgia's motor fuel tax break has saved drivers more than $300 million in taxes and is set to expire on July 14th.

Rising gas prices are one symptom of inflation and the War in Ukraine thatโ€™s been hitting American consumersโ€™ wallets hard. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp extended the stateโ€™s motor fuel tax break until mid-July. With the national average of a gallon being at $4.91, his Democratic gubernatorial opponent Stacey Abrams is pushing for this break to be extended until the end of the year, as the Atlanta-Journal Constitution notes.

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For Abrams, thereโ€™s no better time than now to assure some relief for Georgians as prices may not go down for a while.

From the Atlanta-Journal Constitution.

โ€œThe time to do the right thing is well past overdue,โ€ Stacey Abrams said in a statement Tuesday to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. โ€œSuspend the state gas tax through the end of the year and give hardworking Georgians the stability they deserve.โ€

An Abrams aide said she would finance the extension of the gas tax break, which amounts to roughly $170 million monthly in tax revenue vital to transportation projects, by dipping into the stateโ€™s surplus. Kempโ€˜s office used budget surplus funds to fill the gap for the first few weeks of the tax break.

A bipartisan mix of lawmakers passed legislation in mid-March to temporarily halt the state sales tax collection until May, saving drivers more than $300 million in taxes. Gov. Kemp extended it until July 14th. Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA) has proposed to suspend the 18.4 cents-per-gallon federal gas tax until 2023 as a part of his campaign.

Kemp spokesman Tate Mitchell attempted to hit back at the supposed โ€œhypocrisyโ€ of Abramsโ€™s campaign.

โ€œAbrams took credit for Joe Bidenโ€™s win, supports his disastrous policies at every turn, and opposes Governor Kempโ€™s action to address inflation and the cost of living,โ€ he said.

โ€œShe now suddenly backs a proposal which she has no plan to pay for because her campaign just realized what hardworking Georgians have known all along: Georgia canโ€™t afford four years of the Biden-Abrams agenda.โ€

The House recently passed The Consumer Fuel Price Gouging Prevention Act that would expand the powers of the Federal Trade Commission to investigate alleged price gouging in the industry. Itโ€™s doubtful that the bill will get 60 votes to pass in the Senate. Georgiaโ€™s gas prices have hit one of their highest points at $4.33 a gallon.

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