Republican
Senator Bob Corker said increasing tax revenues from wealthier Americans would
have to be part of the plan, but he stressed closing loopholes rather than
raising top tax rates as many Democrats favor, provided spending is also
tackled.
"I am
optimistic," Corker told "Fox News Sunday." "I think there
is the basis for the deal. ... There is a way of getting there on the revenue
side. The real question is: can we come to terms on the entitlement side?"
Obama has
invited congressional leaders to the White House on Friday to discuss the
issue, with only 50 days left until the end of the year. Unless Congress acts
first, $600 billion in tax hikes and automatic federal spending cuts would take
effect at the end of December, with a potentially devastating impact on the
economy.
The Obama
administration and congressional leaders are attempting to negotiate a deal to
avoid the fiscal cliff, and instead work toward a deficit-reduction package in
the next session of Congress that begins in January.
'SKIN THIS
CAT'
Top Obama
aide David Axelrod, asked if it was possible to raise enough revenue to curb
the deficit without increasing the top tax rate, praised the
"encouraging" remarks by Speaker of the House of Representatives John
Boehner, the top Republican in Congress, on the need to tackle the problem.
"Obviously,
there is money to be gained by closing some of these loopholes and applying
them to deficit reduction," Axelrod told CBS's "Face the
Nation." "So I think there are a lot of ways to skin this cat, so
long as everybody comes with a positive, constructive attitude toward the task."
Boehner
last week repeated his party's commitment to not raise anyone's tax rates, but
said that he would be open to a compromise that includes changes in the tax
code that bring in more revenue, something fiscal conservatives in his party
have argued strongly against in the past as tantamount to a tax hike.
Tax cuts
first put in place under Republican former President George W. Bush are due to
expire at the end of the year for all Americans unless Congress acts. That
would lift the top rate of income tax from the current 35 percent for
households earning more than $250,000 a year to 39.6 percent.
Obama won
re-election on Tuesday after a campaign in which he called for wealthier
Americans to pay a bit more in taxes. But a range of deductions, including on
mortgage interest payments and charitable giving, can significantly lower the
effective tax rate that most affluent U.S. households pay.
'MATHEMATICALLY
IMPOSSIBLE'
Another
influential Democrat, Senator Charles Schumer, voiced skepticism that it would
be possible to raise enough revenue to lower the deficit sufficiently without
lifting the tax rate on the rich, but said he is open to hearing other ideas.
"The
only way mathematically that I've seen to do it, is go to that 39.6 percent
rate. If someone can show another plan that doesn't do that ... we could look
at it. But no one has shown one because I think it is mathematically
impossible," Schumer said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Limiting
some deductions while closing loopholes is the middle ground proposed in 2010
by a commission created by the president and led by Republican Alan Simpson and
Democrat Erskine Bowles. Republican Senator Lindsey Graham urged Obama to sign
on to its recommendations while pledging to do the same.
"Say
'yes' to Simpson-Bowles, Mr. President. I'm willing to say 'yes' to
Simpson-Bowles. We need more revenue in Washington. We need more private sector
jobs. We don't need to raise tax rates," he said on CBS's "Face the
Nation."
Graham
also warned that no Republican will vote for higher tax rates, and that reform
of entitlement programs - such as the Social Security retirement program, the
Medicare health insurance program for the elderly and disabled, and the
Medicaid health insurance program for the poor - must also be tackled.
"We
will generate revenue from eliminating deductions and loopholes. But we will
insist our Democratic friends reform entitlements. ... That is where the big
money is at."
Failure to
convincingly tackle the fiscal cliff could unsettled financial markets and risk
another downgrade of the U.S. credit rating, while imposing a heavy burden on a
fragile recovery that could even tip the economy back into recession.
Democrat
Kent Conrad, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, voiced optimism that the
country would avoid the fiscal cliff, and said Congress must agree on a measure
that wins some time to work out a more detailed plan to overhaul the tax code
and entitlement programs.
"You
can't settle every detail in these next few weeks. What you can do is agree on
a framework agreement that sets out for the (congressional) committees of
jurisdiction how much they need to save, how much money needs to be
raised," Conrad said on "Fox News Sunday."
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