Republican lawmakers have repeatedly vowed not to endorse any tax increases, making it likely they will turn to other bargaining chips to strike a deal with the White House on the expiring tax cuts.
Lawmakers from both parties sat down on Wednesday with representatives of the Obama administration in the hopes of ironing out an agreement, but it is doubtful that Republicans will meet them halfway.
While Democrats have indicated they are willing to bend on Obama’s plan to lift taxes on families making more than $250,000 a year, Republicans assert any tax increase will do further harm to the ailing economy.
Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) recently proposed extending all the George W. Bush-era tax cuts except for people making more than $1 million annually. Republicans quickly rejected that plan.
Conservative-leaning groups anticipate some sort of extension of the tax cuts for all brackets. Anything less than such an extension would trigger strong criticism from the right.
If Republicans agree to any tax hike, it would be “completely catastrophic,” according to Ryan Ellis, the director of tax policy for Americans for Tax Reform.
“I think you’d find not only us but the entire American conservative movement go apoplectic, because that’s been the expectation,” he said.
Based on that pressure and their public statements on the campaign trial, Republican negotiators are likely to use bargaining chips that have nothing to do with taxes.
President Obama is strongly urging lawmakers to approve a pending U.S.-Russia treaty and to extend unemployment benefits. Senate Republicans have softened their stance on the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) in recent days and have said they will not back an unemployment-benefits bill until a tax deal is in place.
Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl (Ariz.), one of several GOP negotiators on the tax cuts, is a key figure on START. Kyl last month indicated the Senate should not tackle START in the lame duck, but in recent days has indicated it could be addressed this month in the upper chamber.
Kyl said Wednesday that if negotiators don’t reach a deal on the Bush taxes within a week, “then you’re not going to have time to do START.”
Meanwhile, two high-profile conservatives, Rep. Mike Pence (R-Ind.) and Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), will formally introduce legislation on Thursday seeking to extend all the tax rates permanently. Both House GOP Leader John Boehner (Ohio) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) support a permanent extension of the Bush-era tax cuts. However, many Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill believe the tax cuts will be extended for a certain amount of time.
3 comments:
We already know everyone's stance on taxes. Take the vote and move on to START. The new congress has plenty of time to tackle the tax issue in Jan. but START is time sensitive.
START is a scam.
Nobody will disarm but the US.
There will be plenty of time to discuss that in the new Congress.
First things first.
Cut taxes and spending. Now.
9:03, something tells me you can't supply a factual analysis that supports you START "scam" claim. Please prove me wrong.
Regardless, the tax issue has been discussed in depth. Vote on extending the cuts and let the chips fall where they may and move on.
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