House Speaker John Boehner says he’s open
to a budget deal with President Barack Obama. He may need Democratic help to
push any agreement through his chamber.
Pressure from at least 60 small-government
House Republicans, most backed by the anti-tax Tea Party, means Boehner must
construct a plan for averting the so-called fiscal cliff that can win some
Democratic votes. Congress is trying to head off more than $600 billion in
automatic spending cuts and tax increases set to begin in January.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi,
foreground left, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Speaker of the House John
Boehner and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell speak to the media at the
White House on Nov. 16, 2012 in Washington, where they met with President
Barack Obama. Photographer: Roger Wollenberg/Getty Images
House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican
from Ohio, stands during the pledge of allegiance at the Republican National
Convention in Tampa. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg
“Everybody’s for fixing the problem until you get into the weeds,”
said Ron Bonjean, who was an aide to Republican former Speaker Dennis Hastert
of Illinois. “Serious divisions are going to likely slow this process down.”
Boehner, 63, of Ohio and other Republicans
have called on Obama to propose a way to trim entitlement programs in exchange
for more tax revenue. All sides are trying to craft an agreement that would
satisfy the president, congressional leaders of both parties and, for Boehner,
enough Republican lawmakers for the math to work in the 435-member House.
The speaker was in a similar position in
negotiating the 2011 budget deal that set up the automatic spending cuts as a
condition of raising the debt ceiling, following a standoff that took the U.S.
near a default. With 218 votes needed, the plan was passed with support from
174 Republicans and 95 Democrats. Opposing it were 66 Republicans and 95
Democrats.
‘Very Difficult’
“I know this is a very difficult time for our speaker and our
leadership. So, I have great sympathy for John Boehner,” Representative Dan
Burton, an Indiana Republican, said in an interview this week. “Obama is in the
driver seat.”
Boehner and other Republicans insist on
overhauling entitlement programs -- such as Medicare and Medicaid -- and
changing the U.S. tax code in exchange for new revenue sought by Democrats.
Yesterday, the speaker pressed Obama and congressional Democrats to get
“serious” about spending cuts.
He also maintained his opposition to
Democrats’ proposal to let the George W. Bush-era tax cuts expire Dec. 31 for
top earners. Boehner rejected a suggestion by Republican House member Tom Cole
of Oklahoma that party members accede to the president’s demand that Congress
extend the tax cuts for families with incomes of less than $250,000 a year.
Still, the speaker told reporters yesterday
he’s “optimistic that we can continue to work together to avert this crisis,
and sooner rather than later.”
Standard & Poor’s
Stocks rose after Boehner spoke. The
Standard & Poor’s (SPX) 500 Index climbed 0.8 percent to 1,409.93 in New
York, after erasing a decline of as much as 1 percent. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average added 106.98 points, or 0.8 percent, to 12,985.11.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner plans
to meet separately today with each of the four top leaders in Congress,
including Boehner. That will mark the first face-to-face meetings between
high-ranking administration officials and top lawmakers since Nov. 16.
The number of Republican votes for any deal
this time may fluctuate, said Representative Jeff Flake, an Arizona Republican
who won a Senate seat in November. He will vote in the House in the current
lame-duck session.
“It depends on the agreement, it really does,” Flake said in an
interview.
Geithner Meetings
Representative Allyson Schwartz, a
Pennsylvania Democrat, said that regardless of what agreement may be reached,
Boehner probably will lose at least 50 to 60 votes among Republicans who
earlier opposed bipartisan measures to raise the debt ceiling and stopgap
spending bills to keep the government operating.
“It really is a question the Republicans will have to decide, if
they’re going to work with us,” she said in an interview. “That’s how we’ve
gotten all the big stuff before.”
Republicans now hold the House majority
with 241 seats to the Democrats’ 192, with two vacancies. In January, Democrats
will gain eight seats.
“We don’t discuss votes but we’re pleased with the support for the
framework offered by the leaders to avert the fiscal cliff without raising tax
rates,” Kevin Smith, a Boehner spokesman, said in a statement.
At least 51 of the 55 Tea Party-backed
House members were re-elected Nov. 6, cementing their influence in budget
negotiations. In addition, the principles of the Republican Study Committee, a
group of 165 lawmakers that promotes small government, align with those of the
Tea Party on fiscal issues.
Diverse House
“It’s a very diverse body and rightly so. We have a first
responsibility to represent our district back home, not the speaker’s opinion,”
Representative James Lankford, an Oklahoma Republican, said in an interview,
while emphasizing his support for Boehner as a negotiator.
Anti-tax, small government Republicans say
a deal between Obama and congressional leaders can’t raise tax rates and must
include an overhaul of entitlement programs such as Medicare. Spending cuts of
about $109 billion to discretionary programs slated for 2013 must be part of a
deal, according to Representative Tim Huelskamp, a Kansas Republican.
Putting off those cuts is “unacceptable,”
and concessions on increasing tax rates for any income level “would be
political suicide” for the party, said Huelskamp, a Tea Party caucus member
re-elected for a second term.
Tax Breaks
Even the most strident anti-tax Republicans
-- including Huelskamp, Raul Labrador of Idaho, Jim Jordan of Ohio and Tom
McClintock of California -- have said they would be open to increasing tax
revenue in a deal to avoid the fiscal cliff, mostly by ending or limiting some
tax breaks. They continue to oppose increasing tax rates.
“Every conservative is OK with closing loopholes,” Labrador said
during a “conversation with conservatives” event in Washington Nov. 14. “What
we want to make sure is that we don’t have marginal rates go up and that the
overall tax burden remains the same.”
Representative Mike Coffman, a Colorado
Republican, said Boehner would have a “hard time selling an increase in
marginal tax rates to the conference.”
“We will be probably willing to support raising revenue through
closing loopholes and deductions,” Coffman, a member of the Tea Party caucus,
said in an interview. “The line would be drawn that we don’t want marginal
rates to go up and that we want the Bush tax cuts extended and permanent.”
Medicare, Medicaid
Without an agreement from Democrats to
overhaul Medicare and Medicaid, Boehner may risk the support of many
Republicans. Democrats have said Social Security is off the table.
Dissent from fellow Republicans in 2011
posed the biggest test to Boehner’s first year as speaker. Amid Republican
opposition to tax increases, talks between Boehner and Obama on a long-term
deficit-cutting plan to be tied to the debt-limit increase collapsed.
At the time, Boehner likened negotiating
with the White House to “dealing with a bowl of Jell-O.” Obama said that at one
point Boehner didn’t return his phone call, and the president complained of
being “left at the altar.”
Jordan, chairman of the Republican Study
Committee, voted against raising the debt ceiling last year. The ticking clock
on the fiscal cliff is “a crisis that we created with legislation that was
passed here,” he said.
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