November 30, 2012
The critical negotiations over a way to avoid the fiscal cliff are fast turning into a game of chicken.
Shedding his optimistic disposition, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, summoned reporters Thursday afternoon to declare it was time that President Obama and the Democrats revealed how they intended to cut spending and slow the rate of growth of Medicare and other costly entitlements as part of a Grand Bargain of deficit reduction.
“I’ve got to tell you, I’m disappointed in where we are and what has happened in the last couple of weeks,” Boehner said.
Shedding his optimistic disposition, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, summoned reporters Thursday afternoon to declare it was time that President Obama and the Democrats revealed how they intended to cut spending and slow the rate of growth of Medicare and other costly entitlements as part of a Grand Bargain of deficit reduction.
“I’ve got to tell you, I’m disappointed in where we are and what has happened in the last couple of weeks,” Boehner said.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and other Democrats
immediately scoffed at the speaker’s complaints and insisted it was time
the Republicans revealed how much in new tax revenues they were willing
to put on the bargaining table.
“The president has got a budget
that he’s submitted to Congress that has revenue and it also has
spending cuts,” said Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, the ranking
Democrat on the House Budget Committee. “Where’s Speaker Boehner’s
plan?”
Sen. Ben Cardin, a Maryland Democrat, called the speaker’s complaints “disingenuous”and added:
“We all know that we’ve already done a trillion dollars in discretionary domestic spending cuts, and the challenge is to move forward on the revenues.”
Far from seeking common ground to avert a year end
calamity of automatic tax hikes and spending cuts that could trigger
another recession, the Democrats and Republicans appear to be trying to
escort each other over the fiscal cliff. Senior administration
officials had a testy meeting yesterday with Boehner and other
Republicans that further soured the negotiations, and Obama is hitting
the road today for Philadelphia to try to rally voters to his side in
the negotiations.
While both sides fear being blamed if a deal
isn’t reached before the end of the year, a new poll from CNN/ORC shows
that 45 percent of the public would blame congressional Republicans –
even though the Democrats control the Senate – while just 34 percent
would blame the president.
“Look, the White House clearly realizes
that the longer they wait, the more pressure there’s going to be on the
Republicans,” said Stan Collender, a budget analyst and expert. “So
they’re not rushing to get anything done. And the White House learned
from the negotiations over the debt ceiling in August 2011 not to
negotiate with itself. So this is a definite change in tactics that
seems to be frustrating Republicans to no end.”
There is general
agreement that the government should commit to about $4 trillion in
savings over the coming decade, which would be achieved through a
combination of spending cuts, tax increases and reforms of the federal
tax code and entitlement programs. But there is almost no unanimity on
how to get there.
Obama’s road map would include $1.6 trillion of
new tax revenue and roughly $350 billion to $400 billion of additional
savings from Medicare and other health insurance programs. The rest of
the savings would largely be achieved by taking credit for the $2.1
trillion of long term savings agreed to in August 2011 as part of a deal
to raise the federal debt ceiling by $2.1 trillion to its current $16.4
trillion level, “ according to Van Hollen.
“The president’s plan
has that combination of revenue and cuts,” he said. “Speaker Boehner
keeps talking about revenues. We’ve never seen a proposal on revenues.
Have you?”
Republicans have signaled that they might go along with
$800 billion of additional revenue – the amount that Boehner and Obama
discussed as part of their secret debt ceiling talks in 2011—while
insisting that the Democrats commit to far greater spending cuts.
The
differences flared up yesterday after administration officials
conferred behind closed doors with Boehner and Democratic congressional
leaders on Capitol Hill. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and
White House congressional liaison Rob Nabors signaled to the Republicans
that the president still intended to seek $1.6 trillion in new taxes
over the coming decade, starting with an immediate increase in the rates
for the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans, the Washington Post
reported.
While the Republicans have indicated they might go along
with half that amount of new revenue, they refuse to raise the top
rates. Instead, they insist they could generate the revenue by capping
the amount taxpayers can claim in deductions and overhauling and
simplifying the tax code to make it more efficient—an assertion the
Democrats don’t buy.
Moreover, the administration demanded that
Congress relinquish control over federal debt levels and approve at
least $50 billion in new spending to boost the economy next year as part
of an agreement to avert the year-end fiscal cliff., according to the
Post.
In return, the president offered to find $400 billion over
10-years in savings from federal health and retirement programs. But
those savings would be wiped out, the Republican aides said, by Obama’s
proposal to extend a slew of expensive policies, including emergency
unemployment benefits and a temporary payroll tax holiday that is now
set to expire at the end of the year.
Republicans apparently
viewed the offer as a slap in the face, and Boehner at his news
conference sharply criticized Democrats for not outlining possible
expenditure cuts. Republican leaders stipulated these reductions as part
of a “Grand Bargain,” including additional tax revenues to shrink the
deficit over the long term.
With only a few more weeks before the
lame duck Congress runs out of time, some lawmakers said yesterday they
were dismayed the negotiations aren’t further along. Sen. Jeff B.
Sessions of Alabama, the ranking Republican on the Senate Budget
Committee, said, “I can’t imagine the President of the United States at
this late date isn’t willing to say what he thinks and what his vision
for America is. He has not discussed the $16 trillion debt. He will not
tell the American people they’re on an unsustainable path.”
Senate
Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., said, “We’re going to
have to get together. There isn’t a lot of time left. It’s negotiating
time, it’s good faith time, it’s getting this done time, that’s number
one. Because that’s what the American people want, the markets want some
predictability and certainty. This is a no brainer. People have got to
get together.”
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