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Granite Staters are paying taxes today—but are billionaires and big corporations dodging theirs?

Granite Staters are paying taxes today—but are billionaires and big corporations dodging theirs?

“The math doesn’t add up—and families across the country are paying the price,” said Mona Shah, senior director of policy and strategy at Community Catalyst. Photo: Wave Break Media/Shuttershock

By Lucas Henkel

April 15, 2025

Community organizations across the US are coming together this Tax Day to tell Congress to prioritize people over profits—here’s how you can get involved. 

This Tax Day, while teachers, EMTs, and nurses continue to pay their fair share, corporations and the wealthiest people in the US are being handed tax breaks. 

“The math doesn’t add up—and families across the country are paying the price,” said Mona Shah, senior director of policy and strategy at Community Catalyst, a national organization dedicated to creating a health system where health is a right for all. 

“Our tax code currently favors billionaires and large corporations, while underfunding the programs families count on—driving medical debt, surprise bills, and barriers to care.”

It’s like adding salt to the wound for Granite Staters, especially after House Republicans recently voted to pass a $16 billion budget plan that would gut the state’s Medicaid program to fuel New Hampshire’s school voucher program, all while lining the pockets of the wealthy elite. 

“This budget contains new premiums for families with children on Medicaid, and for those in New Hampshire’s Medicaid expansion program. People with incomes under $20,000 a year, those who can barely afford to make ends meet, will now be forced to fork over 5% of their income just to keep their health care,” said House Democratic Leader Alexis Simpson at a rally on April 9.

Related: NH House Republicans pass 2026 budget that raises taxes on working families, funds school vouchers and tax breaks for wealthy

That’s why Community Catalyst has partnered with several organizations to expose the connection between tax policy and health inequities by highlighting how Medicaid cuts and medical debt are driven by a tax code that benefits corporations and the wealthy at the expense of communities. 

The proposed tax cuts by the Trump administration could jeopardize funding for programs like Medicaid, threatening essential health coverage for more than 180,000 Granite Staters—about 13% of the state’s population.

Trump’s proposed tax cuts would also threaten enhanced premium tax credits that have helped make health insurance more affordable for 20 million individuals across the country. Without them, premium payments would cost about $700 more per person each year. 

Trump’s proposed tax cuts could additionally make it harder for the nearly 40 million people who rely on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)—including 1 in 5 children—to help put food on their tables. 

As the cost of living continues to rise across the US, the proposed tax cuts could threaten nearly three million people who rely on rental assistance to help them pay rent each month and avoid eviction and homelessness. 

“Tax day highlights gaping disparities in a system that Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and Congressional Republicans are skewing even further in favor of the wealthy by gutting essential public programs like Medicaid and Social Security, raising costs, and giving trillions in tax handouts to the very rich,” said Kristen Crowell, executive director of Fair Share America, in a press release.

However, Crowell says that the Trump administration and his wealthy allies aren’t doing it without a massive fight from community members. 

“Across the country, people are courageously telling their stories and demanding that their members of Congress stand with workers and families over corruption and greed,” Crowell said.

Contact your congressional representatives if you’re interested in joining the fight for a tax code that prioritizes health and equity, and tell them that reforms like taxing wealth fairly and restoring the estate tax can fund essential services and close harmful gaps.

For more information on how to get involved, visit communitycatalyst.org/get-involved

Author

  • Lucas Henkel

    Lucas Henkel is a multimedia reporter who strives to inform and inspire local communities. Before joining The 'Gander, Lucas served as a journalist for the Lansing City Pulse.

CATEGORIES: NATIONAL ECONOMY
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