This piece calls out Democratic leaders from coast to coast for tax hikes, protection of fraud, and a clear disrespect for taxpayers and accountability.
“No taxation without representation” was a rallying cry of the Revolutionary War and is one of the bedrock principles of America. Our system of government was arranged so that the will of the people, through their representatives, is reflected in government. That includes taxation.
When taxpayers see waste, abuse, and fraud stacked up in states like Minnesota and California, you’d expect at least a show of outrage from the party that runs those places. Instead, what we get is dodge and deflect, with Democratic officials more interested in protecting the narrative than protecting the public purse. It’s a tone-deaf response when folks are asking simple questions about where their money goes.
Take California, where the fallout from widespread hospice fraud uncovered by reporters should have been met with swift prosecutions and fixes. Instead, Democrats there are reportedly moving to criminalize the kind of investigative journalism that exposed the scheme. Even if such a bill were struck down in court, the attempt to silence reporters is revealing and shows priorities upside down.
In New York City the new leadership staged a tax day celebration that looked more like a victory lap for taking from one group to hand to another. Mayor Zohran Mamdani framed the move as reclaiming money from the wealthy, assuming that poorer, non-white New Yorkers are entitled to what others earned. That attitude treats taxpayers as sources to be harvested, not citizens whose rights and property deserve respect.
Virginia’s shift after electing a Democrat governor produced proposals that read like a parody until you remember they’re meant to be law. Lawmakers floated taxes on everyday services from dog walking to dry cleaning to gym memberships, squeezing ordinary budgets while also voting themselves a pay raise. That combination of tax hikes and self-enrichment is exactly why voters distrust career politicians.
In Philadelphia the mayor who once flubbed spelling “Eagles” at a rally now bristles at being told how to tax her constituents. The message from City Hall has been blunt: don’t tell me how to raise revenue. That posture is especially striking given the state of the local schools and the size of local spending.
“We are open for business here,” Parker said. “But how dare you tell me, as mayor of this city, to tell the people in this city that we cannot and should not enact what one of the most limited powers that we have is, and that is to decide how we will drive revenue to the school district of Philadelphia.”
That school district spends about $21,000 per student per year, and yet fewer than 40 percent of students are proficient in reading, even fewer are proficient in math, and only 77 percent graduate high school. Those numbers are unacceptable, and they raise a basic question: if city leaders insist on extracting more from families and businesses, why is performance not improving? Accountability has to mean more than rhetoric about revenue streams.
Philly Mayor Charelle Parker: "How dare you tell me, as mayor, how to tax you?" pic.twitter.com/WXaX7zzFEy
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) April 16, 2026
A few weeks back Leftist protesters marched demanding “No Kings” in America, including in Philly, and they yelled at anyone who suggested otherwise. The irony is thick when the same movement screams at the idea of concentrated power while local officials wield tax authority with kingly assumptions. Mayor Parker’s posture — confident that she knows best how to spend other people’s money — reads like a modern-day King George.
That contrast is the point. Citizens who pay taxes deserve transparency, effective schools, and leaders who respect property and free speech. Yet too many Democratic officials answer calls for accountability with new taxes, legal threats to reporters, and a rank confidence in their own judgment above that of the people they govern. And Democrats seem okay with that.




