Washington (CNN) -- President Barack Obama and
congressional leaders will discuss the looming fiscal cliff impasse
Friday at the White House, aiming for a last-minute deal to stave off
automatic tax increases and spending cuts.
The 3 p.m. meeting --
which will include Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, House Speaker John
Boehner, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell -- will come days
before the deadline to reach a deal, and after another day of
Republicans and Democrats blaming each other for the stalemate.
White House spokeswoman
Amy Brundage confirmed the meeting, but did not elaborate. Boehner
spokesman Brendan Buck and McConnell spokesman Don Stewart both tried to
put the onus on their rival political party -- in the former case
urging the Democratic-led Senate to pass a bill approved by the GOP
majority in the House, and in the latter asking for a detailed proposal
from Obama.
Earlier Thursday,
McConnell said his side won't "write a blank check for anything Senate
Democrats put forward just because we find ourselves at the edge of the
cliff."
While a Senate Democratic
leadership member said such details would be forthcoming, two White
House officials said Obama will not send a fiscal cliff measure to
Congress.
Reid, the Nevada
Democrat, argued that Republicans undermined a potentially major
agreement over the past two years by refusing to compromise on their
opposition to higher tax rates for the wealthy. Hours before Friday's
meeting was announced, he was doubtful there would be a deal by January
1.
"I don't know, time-wise, how it can happen now," Reid said.
Democrats, GOP challenge each other to act first
The Consumer Confidence
Index sank Thursday amid growing fears the sides won't come together. If
they don't, economists have warned it could cause another recession.
At the least, hopes for
an imminent so-called grand bargain that would address chronic federal
deficits and debt appeared dashed right now, leaving it to the White
House and legislators to work out a less ambitious agreement.
The principal dispute
continues to be over taxes, specifically the demand by Obama and
Democrats to extend most of the tax cuts passed under President George
W. Bush while allowing higher rates of the 1990s to return on top income
brackets.
Obama campaigned for
re-election on keeping the current lower tax rates on family income up
to $250,000, which he argues would protect 98% of Americans and 97% of
small businesses from rates that increase on income above that level.
Republicans oppose any
kind of increase in tax rates, and Boehner suffered the political
indignity last week of offering a compromise -- a $1 million threshold
for the higher rates to kick in -- that his GOP colleagues refused to
support because it raised taxes and had no chance of passing the Senate.
Last Friday, the
president proposed the scaled-back agreement that included his call for
extending tax cuts on households with incomes under $250,000, as well as
an extension of unemployment insurance.
McConnell told Obama in a
telephone conversation Wednesday that he must see details of a proposal
before he can figure out how to proceed on a Senate vote.
However, a senior
Democratic Senate source said Thursday that McConnell must first work
things out with House Speaker John Boehner before Democrats divulge
more.
Such squabbling has left
many doubtful there will be a deal before the fiscal cliff takes
effect. Reid criticized Boehner's insistence the Senate act on House
measures, saying Democrats and Republicans have to agree on something
together.
"We are in the same situation we've been in for a long time," Reid said. "We can't negotiate with ourselves."
Both sides play the 'blame game'
Reid said Boehner wants
to wait until after the new House re-elects him as speaker early next
month before proceeding with a compromise -- one that will need support
from both Democrats and Republicans to pass.
Boehner is "more concerned about his speakership than putting the country on firm financial footing," Reid claimed.
In response, Boehner
spokesman Michael Steel said Reid should stop talking and instead take
up legislation passed by the House to avert the fiscal cliff. This comes
a day after Boehner's leadership team issued a statement saying the
Senate must go first -- either by passing or amending the House-passed
proposal -- and only then will they act, an assertion Buck repeated
Thursday evening.
Reid and Democrats
reject the GOP proposals, which would extend all tax cuts passed under
former President George W. Bush and revamp the spending cuts of the
fiscal cliff. They've called them insufficient, shifting too much
deficit reduction burden on the middle class.
Instead, Reid called on
Boehner to allow a vote on a Senate-passed measure to implement Obama's
plan to extend tax cuts to the $250,000 threshold.
However, McConnell rejected that possibility Thursday, as he sought to focus the debate on revising House-passed measures.
One possibility is the
fiscal cliff takes effect and taxes go up in January, then Congress
steps in to bring tax rates back down for at least some people --
allowing them to say they're lowering taxes, even if taxes for some
wealthy people are higher in 2013 than they were in 2012. But retiring
Republican Rep. Steve LaTourette of Ohio calls that scenario little more
than a political game.
"Nobody is willing to
pull the trigger (because) everybody wants to play the blame game,"
LaTourette said. "This blame game is about to put us over the edge."
Polls show most back Obama
Obama and Democrats have
leverage, based on the president's re-election last month and
Democratic gains in the House and Senate in the new Congress. In
addition, polls consistently show majority support for Obama's position
on taxes.
The Gallup daily tracking poll
released Wednesday showed 54% of respondents support Obama's handling
of the fiscal cliff talks, compared with 26% who approve of Boehner's
performance.
"We believe very
strongly a reasonable package can get majorities in both (chambers)," a
senior White House official said. "The only thing that would prevent it
is if Sen. McConnell and Speaker Boehner don't cooperate."
Anti-tax crusader Grover
Norquist has vowed to back primary challenges against Republicans who
violate his widely signed pledge not to raise taxes. Even if a deal is
reached, he predicts budget showdowns will continue -- every time the
government needs more money to operate.
"There the Republicans
have a lot of clout because they can say we'll let you run the
government for the next month, but you've got to make these reforms," he
said this week.
On Wednesday, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told Congress
the government would reach its borrowing limit at year's end, but could
take steps to create what he called "headroom" for two months or so.
However, Geithner said
uncertainty about the fiscal cliff and deficit negotiations make it hard
to predict precisely how long government measures to address the
situation will last.
Crisis two years in the making
The possibility of a
fiscal cliff was set in motion over the past two years as a way to force
action on mounting government debt.
Now, legislators risk
looking politically cynical by seeking to weaken the measures enacted to
try to force them to confront tough questions regarding deficit
reduction, such as changes to government programs like Social Security,
Medicare and Medicaid.
The two sides seemingly
had made progress early last week on forging a $2 trillion deficit
reduction deal that included new revenue sought by Obama and spending
cuts and entitlement changes desired by Boehner.
Obama's latest offer set
$400,000 as the income threshold for a tax rate increase, up from his
original plan of $250,000. It also had a new formula for the consumer
price index -- called chained CPI -- that wraps in new assumptions on
consumer habits in response to rising prices, such as seeking cheaper
alternatives, and would result in smaller benefit increases.
Statistics supplied by
opponents say the change would mean Social Security recipients would get
$6,000 less in benefits over the first 15 years of chained CPI. Liberal
groups have openly challenged the plan, calling it a betrayal of senior
citizens who contributed all their lives for their benefits.
Boehner appeared to move
on increased tax revenue, including higher rates on top income brackets
and eliminating deductions and loopholes. But his inability to rally
all House Republicans behind his plan last week raised questions about
his role and what comes next.
Reid and other Senate
Democrats say House Republicans must accept that an agreement will
require support from legislators in both parties, rather than the GOP
majority in the House pushing through a measure on its own.
Some House Republicans
have said they would join Democrats and support the president's plan in
hopes of moving past the volatile issue to focus on spending cuts and
entitlement reforms they seek.
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