Boston, Jan 1 : In the city where a protest over tax policy sparked a revolution,
modern day tea party activists are cheering the recent Republican revolt in
Washington that embarrassed House Speaker John Boehner and pushed the country
closer to a "fiscal cliff" that forces tax increases and massive spending cuts
on virtually every American.
"I want conservatives to stay strong," says
Christine Morabito, president of the Greater Boston Tea Party. "Sometimes things
have to get a lot worse before they get better."
Anti-tax conservatives
from every corner of the nation echo her sentiment.
In more than a dozen
interviews said, activists said they would rather fall off the cliff than agree
to a compromise that includes tax increases for any Americans, no matter how
high their income. They dismiss economists' warnings that the automatic tax
increases and deep spending cuts set to take effect Jan. 1 could trigger a fresh
recession, and they overlook the fact that most people would see their taxes
increase if President Barack Obama and Boehner, R-Ohio, fail to reach a year-end
agreement.
The strong opposition among tea party activists and Republican
leaders from New Hampshire to Wyoming and South Carolina highlights divisions
within the GOP as well as the challenge that Obama and Boehner face in trying to
get a deal done.
On Capitol Hill, some Republicans worry about the
practical and political implications should the GOP block a compromise designed
to avoid tax increases for most Americans and cut the nation's
deficit.
"It weakens the entire Republican Party, the Republican
majority," Rep. Steven LaTourette, R-Ohio, said shortly after rank-and-file
Republicans rejected Boehner's "Plan B" — a measure that would have prevented
tax increases on all Americans but million-dollar earners.
"I mean it's
the continuing dumbing down of the Republican Party and we are going to be seen
more and more as a bunch of extremists that can't even get a majority of our own
people to support policies that we're putting forward," LaTourette said. "If
you're not a governing majority, you're not going to be a majority very
long."
It's a concern that does not seem to resonate with conservatives
such as tea party activist Frank Smith of Cheyenne, Wyo. He cheered Boehner's
failure as a victory for anti-tax conservatives and a setback for Obama, just
six weeks after the president won re-election on a promise to cut the deficit in
part by raising taxes on incomes exceeding $250,000.
Smith said his
"hat's off" to those Republicans in Congress who rejected their own leader's
plan.
"Let's go over the cliff and see what's on the other side," the
blacksmith said. "On the other side" are tax increases for most Americans, not
just the top earners, though that point seemed lost on Smith, who added: "We
have a day of reckoning coming, whether it's next week or next year. Sooner or
later the chickens are coming home to roost. Let's let them roost next
week."
It's not just tea party activists who want Republicans in
Washington to stand firm.
In conservative states such as South Carolina
and Louisiana, party leaders are encouraging members of their congressional
delegations to oppose any deal that includes tax increases. Elected officials
from those states have little political incentive to cooperate with the
Democratic president, given that most of their constituents voted for Obama's
Republican opponent, Mitt Romney.
"If it takes us going off a cliff to
convince people we're in a mess, then so be it," South Carolina GOP Chairman
Chad Connelly said. "We have a president who is a whiner. He has done nothing
but blame President Bush. It's time to make President Obama own this
economy."
In Louisiana, state GOP Chairman Roger Villere said that
"people are frustrated with Speaker Boehner. They hear people run as
conservatives, run against tax hikes. They want them to keep their
word."
Jack Kimball, a former New Hampshire GOP chairman, said he was
"elated" that conservatives thwarted Boehner. He called the looming deadline a
political creation. "The Republicans really need to stand on their principles.
They have to hold firm."
Conservative opposition to compromise with Obama
does not reflect the view of most Americans, according to recent public opinion
polls.
A CBS News survey conducted this month found that 81 percent of
adults wanted Republicans in Congress to compromise in the current budget
negotiations to get a deal done rather than "stick to their positions even if it
means not coming to an agreement." The vast majority of Republicans and
independent voters agreed.
Overall, 47 percent in the poll said they
blamed Republicans in Congress more than Obama and Democrats for recent
"difficulties in reaching agreements and passing legislation in Congress." About
one-quarter placed more blame on the Democrats and 21 percent said both were
responsible.
Although negotiations broke down last week, Obama still
hopes to broker a larger debt-reduction deal that includes tax increases on high
earners and Republican-favored cuts to entitlement programs such as Medicare and
Social Security. If a compromise continues to prove elusive, lawmakers could
pass a temporary extension that delays the cliff's most onerous provisions and
gives Congress more time to work out a longer-term solution.
That's
becoming the favored path by some Republicans leery of going over the
cliff.
Mississippi Republican Chairman Joe Nosef shares his Southern
colleagues' disdain for tax increases. But he stopped short of taking an
absolute position.
"I really, really feel like the only way that
Republicans can mess up badly is if they come away with nothing on spending or
something that's the same old thing where they hope a Congress in 10 years will
have the intestinal fortitude to do it," he said.
Matt Kibbe, president
of the national organization and tea party ally, FreedomWorks, says that going
over the cliff would be "a fiscal disaster." He says "the only rational thing to
do" is approve a temporary extension that prevents widespread tax
increases.
But his message doesn't seem to resonate with conservative
activists in the states.
"If we have to endure the pain of the cliff then
so be it," said Mark Anders, a Republican committeeman for Washington state's
Lewis County. "While it may spell the end of the Republican Party ... at least
we will force the government to cut and cut deep into actual
spending."
Back where the Boston Tea Party protest took place in 1773,
Morabito wonders whether Boehner will survive the internal political upheaval
and says Republicans need to unite against Obama.
"It looked like from
the very beginning they were just going to cave to what President Obama wanted,"
she said of the GOP. "I didn't want that to happen. Now I'm hopeful that they're
standing up for taxpaying Americans."
Ends
SA/EN
Home »
» Anti-tax conservatives say no to tax-increase deal
Anti-tax conservatives say no to tax-increase deal
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment