Leon County Indivisible

Leon County Indivisible

Activism for Busy People

  • Home
  • Activism for Busy People
    • Activism for Busy People
    • Defend Democracy
    • Legislators
    • Protest Safely
    • Voting Information
    • Immigration
  • Actions and Events
  • About
  • Bulletin Board (NEWS)
    • Bulletin Board (News)
    • What Can I Do
    • Newsletters
    • Civil Rights
    • Daily Action
    • Education
    • Epstein Updates
    • Federal Legislation
    • Florida Politics
    • Healthcare
    • Immigration-ICE
    • National Indivisible
    • Privacy
    • Senior Citizens
    • Leon County Indivisible News
    • Veterans
    • Voting
    • Videos
  • Join Us!
  • Join Leon County Indivisible
  • Mobilize
  • Educate
  • Engage
  • Home
  • Activism for Busy People
    • Activism for Busy People
    • Defend Democracy
    • Legislators
    • Protest Safely
    • Voting Information
    • Immigration
  • Actions and Events
  • About
  • Bulletin Board (NEWS)
    • Bulletin Board (News)
    • What Can I Do
    • Newsletters
    • Civil Rights
    • Daily Action
    • Education
    • Epstein Updates
    • Federal Legislation
    • Florida Politics
    • Healthcare
    • Immigration-ICE
    • National Indivisible
    • Privacy
    • Senior Citizens
    • Leon County Indivisible News
    • Veterans
    • Voting
    • Videos
  • Join Us!
You are here: Home / Bulletin Board / Noting ‘Political Risk,’ Gop House Member Reveals Plan To Cut Property Taxes

Noting ‘Political Risk,’ Gop House Member Reveals Plan To Cut Property Taxes

Ryan Chamberlain (R. Marion)

Editor’s Note: The majority of the local services in your community – libraries, fire fighters, and your schools – are funded by property taxes. It is the Editor’s opinion that a proposal to replace these funds with tourist taxes places Florida’s communities at the mercy of a single industry, which is unwise under the best of circumstances. Our current situation is NOT the best of circumstances.. Tourism is tanking because people are afraid to come to Florida – a state that is increasingly viewed as an unsafe place to visit, especially due to the recent actions taken by the Surgeon General to limit access to vaccines. International travelers certainly don’t want to come because of fear of ICE. US visitors are angry about concentration camps, tariffs (especially Canadians), and now they are mad at Disney for firing Jimmy Kimmel. View these proposals to eliminate property taxes with the skepticism they deserve.

After months of demands from the Florida governor’s office to slice property taxes, a Belleview Republican announced Tuesday his three-part plan to phase them out.

Rep. Ryan Chamberlin, from Marion County, serving his second term, revealed his “Freedom 1,2,3” proposal to reporters during a Zoom press conference. The move came months after Gov. Ron DeSantis first pressured state lawmakers to eliminate the tax.

The demand set the stage for a tax-cut feud between DeSantis and House Speaker Daniel Perez during the 2025 legislative session; Perez wanted to focus instead on slashing the state sales tax.

“If we do this, no one’s gonna be able to touch us. And we will be the first state in the country to take a dramatic step toward eliminating the most hated tax in America,” Chamberlin, 51, said Tuesday, noting that property taxes statewide have risen by more than 45% since 2019.

Chamberlin’s first point involves legislation to roll property tax rates back to where they were in 2022. He acknowledged that much of his proposal could be subject to change pending further debate but, for now, he wants to eliminate roughly $34 billion of the $43 billion levied through county school and non-school property taxes.

This would mirror 2007’s property tax rollback under then-Speaker Marco Rubio, which forced rates down to reflect the 2006-2007 fiscal year’s levels before the voters approved a constitutional amendment expanding homestead exemptions and capping assessment increases on non-homesteaded properties. It came in direct response to the then-looming 2008 housing crisis, which saw a major market downturn ahead of a crashing stock market.

Once the new rollback removes a slew of property tax revenue, Chamberlin acknowledged, something will have to be done to replace the lost money — traditionally used to fund firefighters, public schools, and other crucial services statewide. This is where “2 and 3” of “Freedom 1,2,3” come in, said Chamberlin, a former consultant and entrepreneur.

He’s proposing a 5% transaction fee on real estate sales, which he says could generate roughly $12 billion a year; a 5% transaction fee on rideshares, hotels, and amusement parks as a “travelers’ fee” to create $3.8 billion in lost revenue; and a 3-cent sales tax going specifically to schools to spawn at least $20 billion to replace the “required local effort” of school property taxes. That money would be collected against purchases in a county and redistributed depending on how many students are in each school.

Chamberlin said he knows this won’t be received well by everyone. Republicans have traditionally opposed raising taxes and, although DeSantis has been chief among Floridian politicos calling for a solution to property tax rates, he also vowed not to sign any tax increases — even if it’s to supplement lost income. DeSantis instead offered a more vague interim proposal involving a $1,000 rebate to homeowners.

“There is a political risk for me or anyone else who rolls out an actual plan, because immediately, there’s going to be those who organize opposition,” Chamberlin said, noting that although many people may try to “poke holes” in his plan, he welcomes the discussion. “It’s easy to talk about doing something about property taxes without ever getting specific about doing anything about it. But I’m convinced that we must have a starting point.”

The loud debate yet lack of action surrounding property taxes dominated the 2025 session. DeSantis and Perez, a Miami Republican, battled over which tax should be cut. Ultimately, the Legislature approved a $1.3 billion tax cut package and Perez created a committee to research the best way to lower costs for homeowners while ensuring state-funded facilities could still operate.

Chamberlin, who’s a member of the House’s 37-member property tax committee, insisted that his plan is not affiliated with DeSantis, the property tax committee, or anyone besides himself.

Still, he mentioned that he’d had recent conversations with the governor, former House Speaker — and GOP gubernatorial candidate — Paul Renner, Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia, Lt. Gov. Jay Collins, and state Sen. Stan McClain — the former House Ways and Means chairman — on cutting property taxes.

The governor’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

READ THE STORY ON FLORIDA PHOENIX

WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT THIS ISSUE?

  • CALL YOUR REPRESENTATIVES and demand they take action.
  • USE A TOOL LIKE RESISTBOT OR FIVE CALLS to contact your elected representatives.
  • SHARE THIS STORY TO RAISE AWARENESS using the buttons at the bottom of this post, If you can’t see the buttons, turn off your ad-blocker for this site.
  • TALK TO FRIENDS AND FAMILY about this issue.
  • MAKE A FLYER about this issue to hand out at your next resistance gathering.
  • ORGANIZE A MEETUP about this issue at your library, favorite coffee shop, or other venue.
  • FIND A LOCAL ORGANIZATION already working on this issue and join forces with them.
SHARE THIS INFORMATION

Published: September 18, 2025

DONATE NOW!

Upcoming Events

Jun 4
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm

What’s the Plan? A Weekly Discussion with Indivisible’s Co-Founders

Organizer: Indivisible - National
Jun 4
3:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Tallahassee Veterans Legal Collaborative

Organizer: Tallahassee Veterans Legal Collaborative
850-815-7686
Jun 5
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm

Lead the Movement: Train the Trainer Leadership Series

Organizer: Equal Ground
Jun 6
12:00 pm - 2:00 pm

ACLU FL Tallahassee Postcard Writing Party

Organizer: ACLU Florida
Jun 11
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm

What’s the Plan? A Weekly Discussion with Indivisible’s Co-Founders

Organizer: Indivisible - National
Jun 11
3:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Tallahassee Veterans Legal Collaborative

Organizer: Tallahassee Veterans Legal Collaborative
850-815-7686
Jun 18
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm

What’s the Plan? A Weekly Discussion with Indivisible’s Co-Founders

Organizer: Indivisible - National
Jun 18
3:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Tallahassee Veterans Legal Collaborative

Organizer: Tallahassee Veterans Legal Collaborative
850-815-7686
Jun 20
11:00 am - 3:00 pm

Make a Plan to Vote Primary Phonebank

Jun 23
8:00 pm - 9:00 pm

Fight Back With Friends! Monthly Call To Action

View Calendar

STOP IMMIGRANT DETENTION FACILITIES

Join the GTFO (Get the Facilities Out) Rapid Response Network to receive immediate alerts if a facility is planned for your community and help lead the local fight to stop it.

JOIN MAILING LIST

NEWS BY CATEGORY

  • Bulletin Board
  • Civil Rights
  • Daily Action
  • Education
  • Epstein Updates
  • Federal Legislation
  • Florida Politics
  • Healthcare
  • Immigration-ICE
  • Leon County Indivisible News
  • National Indivisible
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy
  • Senior Citizens
  • Veterans
  • Videos
  • Voting
  • What Can I Do

GET IN GOOD TROUBLE!

https://youtu.be/S1zVI2avZZo

LET’S CONNECT!

  • Bluesky
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • YouTube

  • Join Leon County Indivisible
  • Mobilize
  • Educate
  • Engage
© Leon County Indivisible