From The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject Tax the rich, build housing -- and we can skip waiting on Congress
Date June 12, 2025 10:08 PM
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The follow message is a sponsored post from Inequality.orgThe follow message is a sponsored post from Inequality.org. The American Prospect is a nonprofit, independent media organization. We rely on reader support and limited advertising to help fund our journalism. Sponsored messages like this one help us sustain our mission. We do not endorse political candidates, and we never sell or share your personal information.

[link removed]

**Cities should tax the rich and fund housing

******

**Seattle's new law will send $53 million a year toward affordable housing.**

Tell mayors: tax the rich and fund housing! [link removed]

Dear readers,

 

The cost of housing should be a scandal. This crisis gets worse every day -- with no relief on the horizon from the Trump administration or Congress.

**But we don't have to wait for Washington to act. Cities can start fixing inequality and building affordable housing now**.

We need more cities to follow the example set by Seattle voters, who passed a new law to tax the richest and send millions toward affordable housing.

Add your name to the Inequality.org petition: tell city leaders nationwide to follow Seattle’s example. [link removed]

Add your name [link removed]

While the federal government ignores important cost-of-living issues and blocks progress,

**we can and should demand that our largest cities address inequality and the housing crisis.**

 

Here's how Seattle's tax works: Anyone earning more than $1 million a year will be subject to a 5% tax on the income above that amount, paid by their employer.

 

This new tax was passed last month by Seattle voters, as Proposition 1A. And it wasn't even close -- it won by a 26-point margin. It is expected to raise at least $53 million a year, dedicated to fund publicly-owned, permanently affordable housing.

 

They call it social housing: publicly-owned housing for residents who earn up to 120 percent of the area median income, currently $145,000. Renters with higher incomes will cross-subsidize the lower-income renters, and rent is capped at 30 percent of household income.

 

Add your name: mayors and city councils nationwide should follow Seattle’s example. [link removed] Tax the rich and fund affordable housing.

 

It's an example of what we can do when we focus on local solutions -- and there's nothing the Trump Administration can do to stop it.

Thanks for adding your voice.

**Chuck Collins,**for Inequality.org [link removed] & the Institute for Policy Studies

****

Find more details at Inequality.org [link removed]:
 

Seattle Activists Win Excessive Compensation Tax to Fund Social Housing [link removed], John Burbank, February 19, 2025

Congress Is Taking from the Poor to Give to the Rich [link removed], Jocelyn Smith, April 22, 2025

A New Permanent Affordable Housing Proposal [link removed] Omar Ocampo, Sept. 23, 2024

How Billionaire Investors Are Disrupting the U.S. Housing Market [link removed], Chuck Collins, Oct. 22, 2024

The Inequality.org [link removed] team is dedicated to highlighting today's absurd wealth inequality -- and solving it. We reveal the ways the rich hoard their wealth, develop policy solutions, and work with activists to get these solutions passed into law. Our weekly free newsletter is the indispensable guide to the latest on our unequal world, in your inbox every Wednesday.

 

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