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Answer Overview

Response rates from 3k Abbotsford voters.

67%
Yes
33%
No
62%
Yes
26%
No
5%
Lower the income tax rate and remove all existing tax loopholes for large corporations
4%
No, but lower taxes for the poor
0%
Yes, and raise taxes on all income brackets
2%
No, keep the current tax structure
1%
Reform to a flat tax

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 3k Abbotsford voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 3k Abbotsford voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from Abbotsford voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @9VDZDY9from Alberta  answered…4mos4MO

there shouldnt be a tax on your paycheck. we pay tax on everything we purchase so by taxing the paycheck then taxing what we pay after we get our check we pay more in taxes then we receive .

 @9ZCXM5Yfrom Alberta  answered…2mos2MO

Lower income tax on the middle and lower class raise income tax on people who make more than a million and raise income tax on billion and million dollar corporations, abolish all tax loopholes for the rich and corporations.

 @9ZXF48Xfrom Ontario  answered…2mos2MO

No, Canada should not raise taxes on the rich because they worked hard to get that money and to be wealthy.

 @9F4F8G8from Alberta  answered…1yr1Y

Yes, and remove any possible loopholes that are currently being used or could be used by large corporations

 @8VSSTYWfrom Alberta  answered…3yrs3Y

 @B29NNVQfrom Ontario  answered…2wks2W

We should marginally reduce income tax and reform government spending. Alberta (Canada's lowest tax region) is taxed more than California (America's highest taxed region). Lower taxes invite more investment in the country and the companies in it. But the above is highly dependent on government spending being fixed and adding a limit to our spending (Similar to the US debt ceiling)

 @B299KXZfrom Ontario  answered…2wks2W

The "rich" needs to be better defined. Making $250,000 before taxes per year does not mean you're rich anymore, it means you live comfortably. I'd argue you'd need to make north of $500,000 per year before taxes to be considered "rich"

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