Quantcast
breaking news

Following Obama's re-election, Boehner offers to play ball

By: Nancy Cook
Updated: November 7, 2012

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, emerged in the aftermath of Tuesday's presidential election to strike a conciliatory note, offering to work with President Barack Obama on a grand bargain to avert the impact of the coming fiscal cliff.

 The top House Republican argued for new negotiations with Democrats and the newly re-elected Obama administration on an overarching fiscal deal linking together reforms to entitlements and the tax code.

Boehner said that Republicans would be "willing to accept new revenue, under the right conditions," though those very conditions could be as beguiling as ever.

By the same token, the speaker suggested that a deal was untenable during the coming lame-duck Congress, calling for a "down payment" on fiscal reform that would give both parties ample space to negotiate in early 2013.

Boehner's words reflected the immediacy of the challenge before lawmakers in the coming weeks if they are to successfully avoid the "fiscal cliff," the nickname for the automatic tax hikes and spending cuts set to spring into place at the beginning of next year.

Economists have warned that this combination, the byproduct of legislative gridlock on issues of tax and spending during the last two years, would imperil the economic recovery in the U.S.

The election on Tuesday maintained Republican control of the House, Democratic control of the Senate and, Obama's control of the White House - the same basic makeup of government that produced gridlock on fiscal issues for the past two years.

  The White House said Wednesday that Obama, just hours after securing re-election, phoned leaders of both parties in the House and the Senate. During those call, the president "reiterated his commitment to finding bipartisan solutions to: reduce our deficit in a balanced way, cut taxes for middle class families and small businesses and create jobs."

But as Boehner called for more time to address the looming fiscal crisis, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid suggested he was disinclined to extend the timeline for reaching a deal.

"I'm not for kicking the can down the road. I think we've done that far too much," he said at a press conference on Capitol Hill. "Waiting for a month, six weeks, six months - that's not going to solve the problem. We know what needs to be done, so I think we should just roll up our sleeves and get it done."

The dueling statements, though, set the parameters for fiscal talks that are set to dominate political discourse in the coming months.

The fight plays out amid election results that, as Vice President Joe Biden asserted on Wednesday, provided the administration with a "clear sort of mandate about people coming much closer to our view about how to deal with tax policy."

  Almost two-thirds of voters, according to national exit polls, said "no" when asked whether taxes should be raised to help cut the budget deficit. But 47 percent of voters, a plurality, said that taxes should increase only on those earning more than $250,000 - a centerpiece of Obama's re-election campaign on which Obama stumped this fall.

Barring any action by Congress, tax rates would spring upward for all income brackets as the 2001 Bush-era tax cuts, which were extended for two years in 2009, expired.

The spending "sequester," established by Congress during the 2011 debt ceiling deal as an incentive for lawmakers to reach a compromise budgetary solution, is also set to take effect at the beginning of next year absent an agreement by Congress.

  Republicans have grown especially worrisome about the sequester because of the heavy cuts it would make to the defense budget.

   As the business of legislating resumes, a key actor in the process could be Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, the former Republican vice presidential nominee who lost Tuesday as Mitt Romney's running mate.

Ryan simultaneously won re-election to Congress, and said Wednesday in a statement that he intends to resume his post as chairman of the House Budget Committee. By Michael O'Brien, NBC News

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

Snakes are slithering their way around the area....

A family that comes together......

We have an update to the story NBC 6 brought you Thursday night regarding the animal hoarding case in Miller County....

You recognize their faces and this weekend you can get the chance to learn from acting professionals Charnele Brown and Andre' Pitre at a special clinic geared towards succeeding in the industry....

Two men were arrested this morning while breaking into cars at an apartment complex on Knight St. Shreveport police believe they may be responsible for car break-ins at five other apartment across...

It's one of the worst local animal hoarding cases officials have seen....

Miller County officials continue to move forward with construction on their dog park....

Each and every Thursday Sci-Port joins NBC 6 News and today Karen Wissing stopped by to talk about some close encounters visitors can have with sea objects over the upcoming weeks....

The First Annual Battle of the Badges Basketball game will be held at the Woodlawn Leadership Academy's gymnasium on May 18th. Woodlawn Leadership Academy's athletic director Patrick Lindsey and by...

We want to wish a terrific Thursday to Cynthia Thomas, our Facebook Friend of the Day....

 
 
 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Arklatexhomepage.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved