Association of Real Estate Taxpayers
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Association_of_Real_Estate_Taxpayers"
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Tax resistance
Part of the Taxation series

Main topics

Conscientious objection to military taxation
History of tax resistance
Religious Freedom Peace Tax Fund Act
Tax resisters

Literature & Film

An Act of Conscience
Civil Disobedience (Thoreau)
The Cold War and the Income Tax

Organizations

Association of Real Estate Taxpayers
National Campaign for a Peace Tax Fund
National WTR Coordinating Committee
Northern California War Tax Resistance
Pagal Panthis
Peacemakers
Women's Tax Resistance League

Campaigns

Beit Sahour
Champaran and Kheda Satyagraha
Gaspée Affair
Hut Tax War of 1898
Salt Satyagraha
Vyborg Manifesto
War of the Regulation

Related

Civil disobedience
Conscientious objection
Divestment
Economic secession
Nonviolent resistance
“Render unto Caesar...”
Tax avoidance and tax evasion
Tax protesters

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The Association of Real Estate Taxpayers (ARET) was an organization of real-estate taxpayers in Chicago and Cook County, Illinois. Between 1931 and 1933, it organized one of the largest tax strikes in American history. The group had been founded in 1930 by several several wealthy real-estate owners.

The chief demand of ARET was that local and state governments obey a long-ignored provision of the Illinois Constitution of 1870 requiring uniform taxation for all forms of property. John M. Pratt and James E. Bistor charged that the failure to assess such personal property as furniture, cars, and stocks and bonds was not only illegal but left owners of real estate with excessive burdens. ARET's program also included support for sweeping rate reductions in the general property tax and retrenchment in local governmental spending.

ARET functioned primarily as a cooperative legal service. Each member paid annual dues of $15 to fund lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of real-estate assessments. The radical side of the movement became apparent by early 1931 when ARET called for taxpayers to withhold real-estate taxes (or “strike”) pending a final ruling by the Illinois Supreme Court, and later the U.S. Supreme Court. Mayor Anton Cermak and other politicians desperately tried to break the strike by threatening criminal prosecution and revocation of city services.

ARET's influence peaked in late 1932, with a membership approaching 30,000 (largely skilled workers and small-business owners.) By this time, it had a budget of over $600,000 and a radio show in Chicago. But it suffered a demoralizing blow in October 1932 when the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear a case it had brought. Buffeted by political coercion and legal defeats, and torn by internal factionalism, the strike collapsed in early 1933.

References

  • David T. Beito, Taxpayers in Revolt: Tax Resistance during the Great Depression (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1989).
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