Vermont’s socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders has been pushing the national Democratic party to extremes. But his own constituents don’t seem to want to come along for the ride leftward. As Mr. Sanders rolls out a plan to increase death taxes (among many other tax hikes he’s proposing), a burgeoning movement in the Green Mountain State has been pursuing tax reform to stem the tide of fleeing Vermonters.

Mr. Sanders remains highly popular in Vermont and won another landslide re-election last year. But his policies are a tougher sell even in this bastion of granola leftism. Last year a Journal editorial reviewed the experience of Vermont in pursuing the signature health care idea of its most famous socialist:

Maybe Democrats should have looked at the results in Vermont when Bernie’s home state tried to set up single payer. A Democratic Governor abandoned the idea in 2014 once he was looking at an 11.5% payroll tax, plus a 9.5% income tax, and more increases to come. Progressives couldn’t even get single payer up and running for about 625,000 people in a state with a decent health profile.

Now Mr. Sanders is flogging a plan to extend federal death taxes to cover many more people and at rates as high as 77%, up from the current top rate of 40%.

But at the state level Vermonters are considering more death tax cuts. Last month Republican Gov. Phil Scott said in his annual budget address:

Tax professionals consistently tell me that because we are so far out of line with other states, the estate tax is a factor in retirees leaving.

In 2016 while Mr. Sanders was off campaigning against financial success, Vermont’s state lawmakers were limiting the bite of the state’s punitive 16% death tax by exempting the first $2.75 million. Now Mr. Scott wants to move the exemption up to $5.75 million. He understands that people who have worked and saved all their lives are free to retire in any state they choose. “Vermonters impacted by this tax are well-advised from tax professionals, and they are highly mobile,” says Mr. Scott.