Looking for debt deal, Obama outlines cuts
WASHINGTON — President Obama
implored congressional leaders Thursday to reach a deal on raising the
nation's $14.3 trillion borrowing limit by this weekend to reassure
jittery world financial markets, and he suggested he could settle for a
smaller deficit-reduction package than he originally sought.
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Rather than continue to push for $4 trillion in
savings over the next decade, Obama outlined a plan that would achieve
roughly $2 trillion, almost entirely from spending reductions. That
marks a major concession — one the president is likely to address at a
news conference scheduled for 11 a.m. ET this morning.
At the same time, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell and Democratic leader Harry Reid
forged ahead with an even smaller deal of their own, one that
represents a second fallback plan. It would allow Obama to raise the
debt limit and create a process by which Congress would vote in the
future on spending reductions.
Two Democratic and two Republican officials with
direct knowledge of the continuing negotiations offered these details on
the condition they not be identified speaking about private meetings:
In Obama's $2 trillion plan, tax increases would
come from a 35% limit on itemized deductions and the elimination of
special-interest tax breaks for oil and gas companies, corporate jet
owners and producers of ethanol. If tax rates on upper-income people
returned to 36% and 39.6% in 2013, as Obama wants, the limit on
deductions would save about $120 billion.
Obama also is seeking to extend a payroll tax cut
enacted last December for another year and possibly extend it to small
businesses. For that reason, Republicans could claim that the package is
revenue-neutral rather than representing a tax increase — but at the
meeting, Republicans still refused to go along.
The remainder of the package would be spending cuts and savings on interest, but not the major reductions in Medicare or Social Security that Obama had been willing to accept as part of a $4 trillion deal.
News from The Oval
"He wants to keep hope alive for the big deal, but he also knows the clock is running," one of the Democratic official said.
McConnell said the session was a good one. "We're
going to continue to discuss a way forward over the next couple of days
and see what happens," he said.
Fueling Obama's demand for swift action: Standard & Poor's ratings service placed the United States
on watch for a possible downgrade of its credit rating. It warned of
"at least a one-in-two likelihood that we could lower the long-term
rating on the U.S. within the next 90 days."
Speaking to Republicans and Democrats meeting at the White House
for a fifth consecutive day, Obama and Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner said any deal should include new borrowing authority to avoid
default as well as a plan to reduce future budget deficits.
That prompted House Speaker John Boehner to throw
the challenge back at the president, arguing that Obama still had not
presented a plan to resolve the nation's debt problem.
Thursday's meeting was more cordial than some of
the previous ones. Republicans listened patiently to pitches about
health care savings, taxes and debt caps from top administration
officials. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, the outspoken leader of
congressional conservatives, was silent.
At the end of the meeting, Obama tasked
congressional leaders to reach a conclusion by the weekend, urging that
it be as bold on deficit reduction as politically possible.
"It's decision time," the president said, according to a Democratic official. "We need concrete plans to move this forward."
The fledgling bipartisan plan being devised by
McConnell and Reid — which would raise the debt limit and appoint yet
another group of lawmakers to come up with spending cuts — might
represent the final fallback plan if all else fails.
Geithner warned that there is no way to extend
the Aug. 2 deadline for the government to raise the debt ceiling and
avoid a first-ever default on its loans.
"We have looked at all available options, and we
have no way to give Congress more time to solve this problem," Geithner
said. "We're running out of time."
Before the meeting, key Republicans continued to
reject any discussion of tax increases. "Republicans will not be reduced
to being tax collectors for the Obama economy," McConnell said.
Without bigger tax increases — such as raising
tax rates on individuals with income over $200,000 and couples over
$250,000 beginning in 2013 — the president and congressional Democrats
won't consider politically difficult cuts in popular benefit programs.
Those could have included raising the age for
Medicare from 65 to 67 over the next two decades, as well as changing
the way inflation is measured, which would reduce Social Security
cost-of-living increases.Q&A: What if U.S. defaults on debt? - USATODAY.com http://usat.ly/VtlKAM via @USATODAY
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