Hatfield, Dec 11:
With barely a month left before the "fiscal cliff," Republicans and Democrats
remained far apart in talks to avoid the across-the-board tax hikes and spending
cuts that threaten to throw the country back into recession.
While
President Barack Obama visited a Pennsylvania toy factory to muster public
support for tax hikes on the rich, portraying Republicans as scrooges at
Christmas time, his primary adversary in negotiations, Republican House Speaker
John Boehner, continued to describe the situation as a stalemate.
The
argument will resume when Boehner, along with Obama's Treasury secretary,
Timothy Geithner, and others, take to weekly political talk shows and pick up
further steam next week with a possible confrontation in the House of
Representatives between Democrats and Republicans over the timing of a vote on
tax hikes.
Lawmakers are nervously eyeing the markets as the deadline
approaches, with gyrations likely to intensify pressure to bring the drama to a
close.
The markets, in turn watching the politicians, fell as Boehner
spoke, but recovered afterward. It was a repeat of the pattern earlier in the
week when the speaker offered a similarly gloomy assessment.
The latest
round of high-stakes gamesmanship focuses on whether to extend the temporary tax
cuts that originated under former President George W. Bush beyond their December
31 expiration date for all taxpayers, as Republicans want, or just for those
with incomes under $250,000, as Obama and his fellow Democrats
want.
After five days of increasingly confrontational exchanges, the work
week drew to a close with an announcement by Democrats of a long-shot effort
next week to force an early tax-hike vote in the Republican-controlled U.S.
House to break the deadlock.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said she
would undertake the rarely successful effort unless Boehner agreed to bring a
bill to the floor allowing taxes on the wealthy to rise, something Boehner is
highly unlikely to do until he is ready.
"The clock is ticking," Pelosi
said at a news conference. "The year is ending. It's really important with tax
legislation for it to happen now. We're calling upon the Republican leadership
in the House to bring this legislation to the floor next week."
While
Boehner offered no immediate response to Pelosi's threat, Cathy McMorris Rodgers
of Washington state, recently elected by Republicans to be the fourth-ranking
party leader in the House, told Fox News in an interview not to expect any tax
vote next week.
Amid the competing statements from the two sides, there
were some actual, albeit modest, signs of potential movement.
Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell threw Republican proposals into the mix for
reform of Medicare, the government health insurance program for seniors, which
has exploded in cost in recent years and is a major contributor to the country's
soaring deficit.
McConnell of Kentucky told the Wall Street Journal in an
interview that Republicans would agree to more revenue - although not higher tax
rates - if Democrats agreed to such changes as raising the eligibility age for
Medicare and slowing cost-of-living increases in the Social Security retirement
program.
Rodgers, in her Fox News interview, declined to completely rule
out a much-discussed potential compromise in which Republicans would accept some
increase in tax rates on the rich, but not to the level desired by
Obama.
More House Republicans - although still just a handful -expressed
flexibility beyond that of their party leaders about considering an increase in
tax rates for the wealthy, as long as they are accompanied by significant
spending cuts.
Most House Republicans refuse to back higher rates,
preferring to raise revenue through tax reform.
Obama, speaking in
Pennsylvania, said he was encouraged by the shifting views of some Republicans,
and urged House approval of a bill that has already cleared the
Democratic-controlled Senate that would lock in the middle-class tax cuts and
raise the rates for the rich.
"If we can get a few House Republicans on
board, we can pass the bill. ... I'm ready to sign it," Obama said.
But
neither he nor the other principals in the debate budged from their basic
positions.
Instead, Obama turned up the pressure, hitting the road to
drum up support for his drive to raise taxes on the wealthy and warning
Americans that Republicans were offering them "a lump of coal" for
Christmas.
In a visit to the Pennsylvania toy factory, Obama portrayed
congressional Republicans as scrooges who risked sending the country over the
fiscal cliff rather than strike a deal to avert the tax increases and spending
cuts that begin in January unless Congress intervenes.
"We already all
agree, we say, on making sure middle-class taxes don't go up. So let's get that
done. Let's go ahead and take the fear out for the vast majority of American
families so they don't have to worry," Obama said at the Rodon Group factory,
which makes K'NEX building toy systems as well as Tinkertoys and consumer
products.
In Washington, Boehner said Obama's plan to raise taxes on the
rich was the wrong approach.
"There is a stalemate. Let's not kid
ourselves," the Ohio Republican said. "Right now we are almost
nowhere."
Ends
SA/EN
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