The Delaware Gazette

Obama presses GOP on taxing rich to avert ‘cliff’

DAVID ESPO

AP Spe­cial Correspondent

WASHINGTON — Pres­i­dent Barack Obama chal­lenged con­gres­sional Repub­li­cans Wednes­day to let taxes rise on the wealth­i­est Amer­i­cans on both eco­nomic and polit­i­cal grounds, not­ing he cam­paigned suc­cess­fully for re-election on the point and con­tend­ing it would instantly ease the threat of the “fis­cal cliff” plung­ing the nation back into recession.

“A mod­est tax increase on the wealthy is not going to break their backs,” Obama said of the nation’s top income earn­ers. “They’ll still be wealthy,” he said at his first news con­fer­ence since win­ning a sec­ond term.

At the same time, the pres­i­dent stressed he was amenable to com­pro­mise on other approaches from Repub­li­cans who say they will refuse to raise tax rates. “I believe this is solv­able,” he said dur­ing the news conference.

At a news con­fer­ence of his own a short while later, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, agreed that a bipar­ti­san “spirit of coop­er­a­tion” has been evi­dent since the elec­tion that augurs well for talks expected to begin Fri­day at the White House.

How­ever, he said of the president’s pro­posal, “We are not going to hurt our econ­omy and make job cre­ation more dif­fi­cult which is exactly what that plan would do.”

Obama seemed eager to avoid issu­ing any ulti­ma­tums. Asked if it would be a deal-breaker for Repub­li­cans to refuse to allow the top tax rate to revert to 39.6 per­cent from the cur­rent 35 per­cent, he side­stepped. “I just want to empha­size I am open to new ideas if the Repub­li­can coun­ter­parts or some Democ­rats have a great idea for us to raise rev­enue, main­tain pro­gres­siv­ity, make sure the mid­dle class isn’t get­ting hit, reduces our deficit.”

Wall Street wasn’t encour­aged that agree­ment was becom­ing more likely. The Dow Jones indus­trial aver­age dropped 185 points for the day.

The president’s remarks were his first extended pub­lic dis­cus­sion of the issue that is dom­i­nat­ing the post­elec­tion ses­sion of Con­gress, and they fol­lowed state­ments ear­lier in the week from Boehner and Mitch McConnell of Ken­tucky, the Sen­ate GOP leader.

Both men have said they, too, want a com­pro­mise and have said they are will­ing to sup­port addi­tional tax rev­enues as part of a deal that includes tax reform and mea­sures to recast the government’s largest ben­e­fit pro­grams. But they appear to rule out any leg­is­la­tion that raises tax rates.

McConnell issued a state­ment call­ing on Obama to “pro­pose a spe­cific plan that includes mean­ing­ful enti­tle­ment reforms to strengthen and pro­tect these pro­grams for future gen­er­a­tions.” He referred to Medicare, Med­ic­aid and Social Security.

The pres­i­dent has moved aggres­sively this week to lay down mark­ers for any nego­ti­a­tions, first meet­ing with labor lead­ers and rep­re­sen­ta­tives of lib­eral groups at the White House, then wel­com­ing a del­e­ga­tion of cor­po­rate chief exec­u­tives for a pri­vate ses­sion moments after wrap­ping up his news conference.

Aides said the pres­i­dent is pre­pared to go to the pub­lic in the com­ing days to enlist sup­port for his posi­tion. He said Wednes­day, “The Amer­i­can peo­ple under­stood what they were get­ting” when they voted for him after a cam­paign that focused heav­ily on taxes.

Obama is expected to wel­come the top lead­ers of both polit­i­cal par­ties to the White House on Fri­day for their first post­elec­tion face-to-face dis­cus­sion of the fis­cal cliff, the com­bi­na­tion of tax increases and across-the-board spend­ing cuts that will take effect as 2012 gives way to the new year unless Con­gress intervenes.

Econ­o­mists in both par­ties have cau­tioned that, given the slug­gish state of the econ­omy, a return to reces­sion is likely unless law­mak­ers and the pres­i­dent reach a com­pro­mise on legislation.

At his news con­fer­ence, Obama laid out bleak prospects if he and law­mak­ers can’t reach agreement.

“Everybody’s taxes will auto­mat­i­cally go up, includ­ing the 98 per­cent of Amer­i­cans who make less than $250,000 a year, and the 97 per­cent of small busi­nesses who earn less than $250,000 a year. … Our econ­omy can’t afford that right now,” he said.

As an alter­na­tive, the pres­i­dent sug­gested that Con­gress pass leg­is­la­tion imme­di­ately to “pre­vent any tax hike what­so­ever on the first $250,000 of everybody’s income,” a mea­sure that he noted has passed the Sen­ate and that Democ­rats in the House are ready to embrace.

“We should not hold the mid­dle class hostage while we debate tax cuts for the wealthy, and we should at least do what we agree on, and that’s keep mid­dle class taxes low,” he said.

He said enact­ment of leg­is­la­tion along those lines would elim­i­nate half of the fis­cal cliff, and he sug­gested that he and law­mak­ers could then “shape a process whereby we look at tax reform” and “take a seri­ous look at how we reform our enti­tle­ments, because health care costs con­tinue to be the biggest dri­ver of our deficits.

Obama signed leg­is­la­tion two years ago extend­ing the Bush-era tax cuts in their entirety after say­ing he wouldn’t.

Asked why this time will be dif­fer­ent, he said, “What I said at the time was what I meant, which is that this was a one-time proposition.”

Now, he said, leg­is­la­tion that keeps most of the cuts in place but not those for the upper-income earn­ers would be “actu­ally remov­ing half the fis­cal cliff.”

White House Press Sec­re­tary Jay Car­ney said the pres­i­dent would bring to the table a pro­posal for $1.6 tril­lion in new taxes on busi­ness and the wealthy when he begins dis­cus­sions with con­gres­sional Repub­li­cans, a fig­ure that Obama out­lined in his most recent bud­get plan. The tar­geted rev­enue is twice the amount Obama dis­cussed with Repub­li­can lead­ers dur­ing debt talks dur­ing the sum­mer of 2011.

Car­ney said the fig­ure, com­bined with $1.1 tril­lion in spend­ing cuts already signed into law, would reduce deficits by $4 trillion.

AP News Posted by on Nov 14 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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