Tagged: Travelocity

Posted: November 17, 2010 at 5:10 pm

The Montana GOP Hypocrite of the Week Award Goes to…

…the Montana Chamber of Commerce, which has come out in favor of out-of-state corporate tax cheats, namely Travelocity and Expedia, who are short-changing the state of Montana on taxes when they sell hotel rooms. No surprise here.  The last time the Chamber took an action on taxes, it tried to get a tax break for big oil companies such as Exxon-Mobil, around the same time the CEO of Exxon was paying himself a $400 million retirement bonus.

As the IR explains in this editorial, and as Montana Revenue Director Dan Bucks describes here, every hotel owner collects and gives to Montana a seven percent tax when a room is sold, and the money the state collects goes toward promoting tourism. But Travelocity and other such websites are evidently keeping the dough for themselves, or at least they are engaged in some fishy bookkeeping. Bucks thinks these companies might owe the state millions of dollars.

The pathetic part about this decision by the Chamber to support a bunch of billion dollar out-of-state tax avoiders is that apparently the Montana hotel owners have come out against what these online giants are doing.

That’s right: One of the most important groups of local business owners in Montana has come out against the nefarious practices of a few multi-billion dollar out-of-state corporations, and yet the Montana Chamber of Commerce has sided with the latter group. That’s kinda hard to believe. At least when they come out in favor of tax breaks for Exxon, one could note that Exxon has a refinery here and is thus a member of the business community.

Why the Chamber would take the side of the big bad guy from another state, rather than the small good guys from Montana, is a mystery, although it probably has something to do with the fact that the national chamber, headquartered in Washington, is a lobby dominated by large corporations, and gives orders to Webb Brown and Jon Benion, the conservative Republicans who run the Montana chamber.

It would not be the first time that these guys went against the prevailing will of the Chamber’s constituents. Recall that the local businesspeople who make up the local chambers of commerce across Montana strongly supported Schweitzer in 2008, and yet the Chamber state leadership, with little input from the rank and file, quietly engineered an endorsement of Roy Brown.  Similarly local chambers have supported mill levies to fund education and the statewide entity fought against increased funding for schools in the legislature.

The other wrinkle in the Travelocity dust-up is that Travelocity, Expedia and the others are evidently lobbying Congress for a bill that would preempt all state power to collect taxes from them. That law, if they could get it, would clearly be worth hundreds of millions to the companies. It would get the companies off the hook on all back taxes they owe states. But it would screw the rest of Americans.

When you cut a giant corporation a break on its taxes, someone else has to make up the difference.

It’s unclear what the Chamber’s position is on that federal law, but I could probably take a guess.

Posted: September 15, 2010 at 6:10 pm

Top Ten Notable Events at the Butte Economic Forum

Thanks to several tipsters who attended for supplying me with the dope.  Your tips make this blog possible.

1. Lotsa billionaires coming and going.  Including Warren Buffett, Barry Diller, Bob Iger, Steve Balmer.  Each sung Baucus’s praises before they spoke to the assembly.  Whether the presence of these magnates appeals to Montana voters, and what these big shots expect in return, are serious questions.  But, they probably filled up hotel rooms in Butte, and hopefully it got Montana some attention in corporate America.

2. Some fireworks.  Schweitzer mixed it up with the CEO of Travelocity for unpaid corporate taxes, at the same time Travelocity was announcing with Baucus that it has decided to spend money promoting Montana on its website.  As for Expedia, which also owes Montana money, it sounds like a much anticipated showdown predicted between Schweitzer and Expedia chief Barry Diller, who was also in attendance at the conference, did not materialize. Perhaps Diller ducked out the back door.

3.  Democrats being lauded by Warren Buffett.  Trillionaire Warren Buffett said Montana (and therefore Democrats, i.e. a Democratic Administration and Democrats in the legislature who fought for the Administration’s priorities, as well as four Democrats in the other state-wide offices) is “doing everything right” when it comes to managing the economy.  I wonder if Chamber of Commerce members were applauding.

4.  Me, selling my GE shares.  Jeff Immelt, CEO of General Electric, arrived with not one but two corporate jets, one of which, according to a well-placed source, was a spare.  If it is true, I am selling my stock in GE (or rather, I would sell it if I owned any).  So should you.  So far, I have received no response from the GE public affairs department confirming or denying this outrage.*

5.  Disney Chief Bob Iger, revealing that he began his career as a weatherman.  Maybe that means a blogger has a chance, too.

6.  Tester, surprisingly absent from the proceedings.  Only a video appearance. No sightings of Jon at this event. Why?

7.  A notable lack of discussion of health-care.

8.  Tim Ravndal, roaming the crowd (no joke).  The Tea Party has an “axe Max” chapter, and evidently they sent Ravndal, the tough and seasoned political operative, to case the event in pursuit of this cause.  Or, perhaps he was dumpster diving for evidence of conspiracies. Plus there were free doughnuts and soda. Maybe he brought a sack and a thermos and loaded up.

9.  Recently ejected Schweitzer administration directors Tony Preite and Betsy Baumgart, greeting and gripping the crowd, seeming very much in their element and appearing to be already employed in some other capacity.

10.  Walt Schweitzer wearing a suit.

*UPDATE: Here is a tardy response, and seemingly “a non-denial denial”, from the GE spokesperson regarding Mr. Immelt’s travel arrangements, which have not gone unremarked upon by the media in the past:

Hello. Mr. Immelt manages 150,000 American workers, 300,000 workers worldwide, and the world’s most widely-held security. The GE board of directors thus requires that Mr. Immelt use corporate aircraft for safety and security purposes.
As for your other “fact[s]“…they aren’t.

Thanks,

Peter O’Toole
Director, Executive Communications
GE

He doesn’t deny that there were two jets in Butte, but rather implies that Mr. Immelt used the extra jet in Butte for security, not convenience, and thus my “facts were wrong.”

Somehow, I suspect that most other CEOs of publicly traded Fortune 500 companies make do with one jet, and are perfectly safe.