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Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Democrats Blast Obama-GOP Deal


Estate taxes draw biggest ire; Republicans fall in line with president on new plan

Disappointed congressional Democrats Tuesday night continued to blast the White House's tax deal with Republicans despite a spirited argument by President Barack Obama that concessions were preferable to higher taxes for millions of Americans.
"I'm not here to play games with the American people or the health of the economy," Obama said of his day-old deal, which is designed to avert a scheduled Jan. 1 expiration of tax cuts at all income levels.
In a remarkable political role reversal, Republicans lined up to support the package, while lawmakers of the president's party said they were prepared to oppose it. Liberal Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., pledged to "do everything I can to defeat this," including a filibuster to prevent a final vote.
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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well when you have idealogues on both sides mad, you must be doing something right!

Anonymous said...

It's only the left that's mad here as usual.

Anonymous said...

Anyone preaching a balanced budget should be concerned about this.

Anonymous said...

Elections have consequences.

lmclain said...

Obama MUST be hatin' life right now...he can't please the right, the left, the middle. I'll bet he's even made his wife mad. LOL! I just wonder, after 3 years of being on unemployment, will there STILL be people clamoring for another "extension" in early 2012? Answer? Damn right. Good luck, Obama.

Scoremore said...

If the concern is that a lot of the wealthy may cut or prevent job hires then why not provide a tax incentive for the business they are in charge of rather than boost their income? How many of those making 250K+ are directly responsible for hiring employees? I’d guess (I know I shouldn’t) that some proportion of these wealthy either inherited it, or or are responsible for a minimum (and not negotiable) number of jobs like doctors, lawyers, actors and sports players (the latter of course to a possibly negligible degree. It seems like a crude way to ensure job growth to just give them all tax reductions. I know there are already business incentives but proposing more to compromise would be much more helpful than flat out giving money to the wealthy. Of course there’s nothing wrong w/ giving money to anyone, except when there are people trying to make ends meet, with no purchasing power on their own to afford necessities like food and health care, which are by the way much more efficient for productivity than luxury cars and 4-star dinners. Something’s off here. Is it just that democrats are completely inept at explaining things or am I not understanding the message?