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Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Senate rejects House GOP budget-cutting plan

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate on Friday firmly rejected a House

Republican bill to slash spending and require a balanced-budget

amendment, leaving unresolved with just days to go the urgent issue

of increasing the nation’s borrowing powers.

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The 51-46 Senate vote against the tea party-backed measure – which

had been expected in the Democratic-run chamber – came shortly

after House Speaker John Boehner told reporters he and President

Barack Obama had failed to reach a separate agreement to resolve

the debt crisis.

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“There was no agreement, publicly, privately, never an agreement,

and frankly not close to an agreement,” Boehner said. “So I suggest

it’s going to be a hot weekend here in Washington, D.C.”

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If progress is to be made over the weekend in the nation’s steamy

capital, it will have to be made behind closed doors and not in the

open.

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Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., canceled planned weekend

Senate sessions, increasing the pressure on Obama, Boehner and

other top-level negotiators to strike a deal.

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Reid said that talks ongoing between Obama and Boehner are focused

on producing legislation involving taxes and that the House would

have to act before the Senate, because tax measures must originate

in the House.

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Boehner underscored his willingness to keep negotiations going,

telling reporters, “As a responsible leader, I think it is my job

to keep likes of communications open.”

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The administration says the government is in danger of defaulting

for the first time in its history after August 2 unless Congress

raises the federal debt ceiling so it can keep borrowing enough to

pay its bills.

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But Democrats and Republicans have been deadlocked over terms of a

deficit-reduction package linked to the debt-limit increase, with

Democrats demanding some tax increases and Republicans insisting on

doing it just with spending cuts.

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The focus now is on efforts by Obama and Boehner to come up with an

ambitious $4 trillion “grand bargain” that would secure the support

of rank-and-file lawmakers. But wide differences still

remain.

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The continuing Obama-Boehner talks kept alive the possibility of

substantial deficit reduction that would combine cuts in spending

on major benefit programs like Medicare and Medicaid and revenue

increases through a broad overhaul of the tax code.

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“We have the opportunity to do something big and meaningful,” Obama

declared in a newspaper opinion piece. Later Friday, the president

took his case to the public again in a town hall-style meeting.

Earlier, from the Capitol, Boehner said House Republicans were

prepared to compromise and prodded Obama: “The ball continues to be

in the president’s court.”

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Even as Republicans contended with the demands of tea party-backed

House members, worry was shifting to how to keep Democrats in line

if a compromise is reached between Boehner and Obama.

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Talk of a deal prompted a spasm of distress among Senate Democrats

worried that Obama would agree to immediate cuts but put off steps

to increase tax revenues that the president has said are key to any

agreement. The White House immediately sought to tamp down talk of

an impending deal.

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Democratic officials familiar with the talks said both the cuts to

benefit programs such as Medicare and a tax overhaul are too

complicated to undertake quickly and would have to wait up to a

year to negotiate. The officials, however, said any agreement would

have to have strict requirements that would guarantee Congress had

to act.

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First, however, the Democratic-controlled Senate on Friday

dispensed with the House-passed measure that would raise the debt

limit by $2.4 trillion on the condition that Congress sends a

constitutional balanced budget amendment to the states for

ratification and approves trillions in long-term spending

cuts.

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That left bargaining for a bipartisan compromise as the only

alternative. Negotiations were proceeding on multiple fronts as

officials searched for the clearest path to avoid a potentially

devastating default. Each path faced sizable hurdles.

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One short-term plan under discussion by some House Republicans

would cut spending by $1 trillion or more immediately and raise the

debt ceiling by a similar amount, permitting the government to

borrow into early 2012. But Obama has insisted on an increase that

lasts into 2013, past next year’s elections. That would require

raising the debt ceiling by about $2.4 trillion.

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White House spokesman Jay Carney said Thursday that Obama remains

“unalterably opposed” to debt limit extensions in the order of six

months, nine months or one year. “His premise is that we have to

raise the debt ceiling for an extended period of time into 2013

regardless,” Carney said.

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Another plan under discussion by Reid and Senate Minority Leader

Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., would guarantee that the president would

get a debt ceiling increase through 2012. It would extract a

political price from Obama, who would have to ask Congress for

three separate increments, and it would allow Republicans to avoid

casting a difficult vote in favor of the debt ceiling that would

anger their constituents. Many House Republicans, however, were

dismissive of the proposal because it did not guarantee deficit

reductions.

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Then there are the efforts by Obama and Boehner to close gaps on a

deal to reduce deficits by about $4 trillion.

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Democratic officials familiar with the discussions said both sides

remained apart on key components of the deal, including the amount

of revenue that a revamped tax code could yield, the nature of the

changes to Medicare and Medicaid, and the process that would

guarantee that both taxes and benefit programs would in fact be

overhauled.

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Republicans have insisted that entitlement programs such as

Medicare need substantial changes, but have loudly objected to any

revenue provision that could be deemed a tax increase. Democrats,

eager to keep changes to their cherished health care programs to a

minimum, have demanded that any plan must have new tax

revenue.

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Democrats in the Senate reacted angrily when word spread that Obama

and the House leaders appeared to be closing in on a deal that

would include $3 trillion in spending cuts but only a promise of

higher revenues to be realized through a comprehensive overhaul of

the tax code.

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White House officials went out of their way to deny that a deal was

near. By day’s end Obama had asked the top four Democrats in the

House and Senate to go to the White House to discuss the status of

the talks. The meeting lasted one hour and 45 minutes.

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In his opinion piece in USA Today, Obama said he was still

insisting on tax revenue being part of the deal. Democratic

officials said that Obama was not demanding that specific tax

provisions, such as restrictions on tax subsidies or closing

loopholes, be agreed upon immediately, but that they could be part

of a broader tax overhaul that Congress would have to

undertake.

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House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., left the door open to

such an approach to tax changes. “I’d like to see it have a revenue

piece so we have tax fairness, whether immediately or something

that’s part of an extended plan to it,” she said

Thursday.

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The Democratic officials said the negotiations focus on immediate

cuts to day-to-day operations of government that are financed at

Congress’ discretion. The legislative work to cut entitlement

programs such as Medicare and Medicaid and to overhaul the tax

system would have to be carried out over the next six month to a

year, the officials said.

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One key sticking point, they said, was how to force Congress to

address entitlement and tax changes to achieve the desired deficit

reduction. Under discussion were mechanisms that would trigger

onerous tax and spending consequences if Congress tried to wiggle

out.

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—–

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Associated Press writers David Espo, Ben Feller and Alan Fram

contributed to this report.

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