Mon, May 28, 2012, 6:29 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Capitol Hill weighs GOP payroll tax gambit

Lawmakers weigh GOP gambit for year-long extension of payroll tax cuts as negotiations falter

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama said Tuesday he's hopeful Congress will renew a 2-percentage-point cut in the payroll tax before it lapses at the end of the month, but said it's important to also renew jobless benefits for millions of the long-term unemployed as well.

"Just pass this middle-class tax cut. Pass the extension of unemployment insurance," Obama said at a White House appearance. "Do it before it's too late and I will sign it right away."

Obama made his remarks a day after House GOP leaders dropped plans to require spending cuts to cover the nearly $100 billion cost of extending the payroll tax cut through the end of the year. The Republicans decided instead to add it to the nation's $15 trillion-plus debt.

The GOP turnabout could rile fiscal conservatives but party leaders want to make doubly sure they don't get the political blame in case the tax cut — which delivers $20 a week to a typical worker making a $50,000 salary — is terminated.

"Washington shouldn't hike taxes on working Americans right now," Obama said. "But that's exactly what's going to happen at the end of this month, in a couple of weeks, if Congress doesn't do something about it."

In the Democratic-majority Senate, a top leader said the proposal was a major step forward, even as other Democrats worried it could jeopardize efforts to renew unemployment benefits for millions of the long-term jobless and efforts to forestall a scheduled cut in fees to doctors who treat Medicare patients. Those proposals would remain in the hands of a House-Senate negotiating panel that's looking for spending cuts to defray the deficit impact.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California said that Democrats in the chamber would support the tax cut if it comes up for a stand-alone vote. But she called upon GOP leaders to cancel next week's congressional recess if talks don't yield a compromise on the entire package.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said he's still hopeful that House and Senate negotiators would reach agreement this week on all three provisions, especially the politically volatile issue of jobless benefits. But Schumer wouldn't say whether Senate Democrats would allow the payroll tax bill to pass separately before the other provisions.

Schumer said the implicit GOP threat of allowing jobless benefits to expire is "just as fraught will peril" as allowing the payroll tax holiday to lapse.

"We believe that we sort of have the upper ground," Schumer said.

The idea is sure to be a topic of conversation Tuesday at the weekly closed-door conferences of Senate Democrats and Republicans, and House Republicans will gather Tuesday evening to discuss it as well.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., and GOP Whip Kevin McCarthy of California said Monday the House could vote on the payroll tax measure this week but the renewal of jobless benefits and the Medicare "docs' fix" still would have to be paid for with spending cuts elsewhere.

The GOP statement came after intense talks over the weekend failed to produce an agreement. Republicans were pressing for pay cuts for federal workers and requiring them to contribute more to their pensions. They recoiled at a Democratic proposal to raise Transportation Security Administration per-ticket airline security fees.

"Democrats' refusal to agree to any spending cuts in the conference committee has made it necessary for us to prepare this fallback option to protect small business job creators and ensure taxes don't go up on middle-class workers," the GOP leadership statement said.

Without action by Congress by the end of the month, payroll taxes will rise for 160 million Americans. The 2-percentage-point tax cut would deliver a tax cut totaling $2,000 this year for someone making a $100,000 salary.

But Democrats warned that decoupling the payroll tax from the larger legislation could jeopardize efforts to renew the jobless benefits and the fix to the Medicare payment formula.

"It's completely irresponsible to leave behind nearly 5 million unemployed Americans whose benefits will expire and 47 million seniors and disabled Americans whose access to health care would be jeopardized," said Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich., a member of the 20-lawmaker House-Senate negotiating panel.

The GOP move reflects a desire by party leaders to avoid a political hit if the payroll tax expires at the end of the month. And it would avoid burdening businesses with uncertainties regarding their payroll systems. On the other hand, jobless benefits lapsed four separate times — including a seven-week interruption — in 2010, and delays in adopting the Medicare fix can be dealt with by delaying the processing of Medicare claims.

The move by the GOP leadership still would leave it to negotiators to come up with $30 billion or $40 billion in deficit savings to extend jobless benefits averaging about $300 a week to people who have been out of work for more than six months. Republicans have pressed to cut the number of weeks from the maximum 99 permitted under current policies and economic conditions down to as few as 59 weeks. They also are pressing to require people receiving unemployment to enroll in GED classes and allow states to condition benefits on the passage of drug tests.

 
  • Luke  •  3 months ago
    What this country needs is more unemployed politicians.
    • MZ 3 months ago
      Three thumbs up!
    • Austinski 3 months ago
      Anarchy?
  • MZ  •  3 months ago
    Kick ALL the BUMS out 2012!!!
    • Josh 3 months ago
      ...and vote for new & improved BUMS!!!
    • Pedro 3 months ago
      I will vote for Obama he is better than the GOP clowns.
  • Fed Up With Washington  •  3 months ago
    Aha, the scare tactics again. Don't leave out the unemployed! How about EMPLOY the unemployed?? I bet most of those on extended unemployment would welcome a job!
    • George - Pat 3 months ago
      Let's see getting a net hourly pay of $500.00 per week vs a gross unemployment pay (taxes are paid at end of year) of $350.00 per week; no brainer I'll take the $500.00 weekly pay.
  • Mike J  •  Henrietta, New York  •  3 months ago
    As Clint Eastwood said, it's halftime and America is ready for a comeback. Problem is China has the ball and we're down by 15 trillion.
    • billy 3 months ago
      We were down that much before and came back to win.
    • Mike J 3 months ago
      when was that? And we have no decent quarterback now, either.
    • billy 3 months ago
      Back in the 70s. Are you the type that doesnt like black quarterbacks?
  • Josh  •  3 months ago
    We will see improvements when elected positions become a volunteer job...no pay, no benifits.....volunteers generally put in more effort to improve things rather than looking for personal gain
    • Grand Old Partaay 3 months ago
      Maybe, but there's one problem with that scenario. Most average people can't afford to volunteer for a no-pay job - they need to work 40 (or more) hours a week to feed their family. The only people who could take that kind of job you describe would be those who are wealthy and don't need to earn a living.
  • Bourbon  •  3 months ago
    I thought Social Security was an "insurance" program? So how can anyone expect to collect it if they do not pay the premiums? Ironic that a Democrap prez is the one undermining Social Security's funding.
  • Irritated  •  3 months ago
    The payroll tax is specifically encumbered to pay for a specific trust... This is one tax that should be off limits to cutting because it is previously encumbered for a specific purpose. Why are some politicians willing to cut a tax used to fund a trust fund but not cut a tax used to fund discretionary items. This is madness.
  • Mr  •  3 months ago
    This will put the debt ceiling debate before the election, that's why....
  • Jim  •  Naperville, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    what good does it do to take a "step forward" if all you're doing is walking in circles.
  • Wonderer  •  3 months ago
    Payroll tax deduction is really the social security tax reduction. Both parties have failed to fix the SS system and this is not solution.
  • Lee  •  Fairfield, Montana  •  3 months ago
    The GOP will fold on paying for the payroll tax cut because its the political thing to do, rather than reduce the debt.
  • We The People  •  3 months ago
    Leadership??????? Biggest joke of the century. Cut income tax not Social Security tax.... idiots.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
    Politicians agreeing on handouts in an election year. Who knew?
  • Captain of lower taxes  •  3 months ago
    It's interesting the only thing Washington can Agree to cut is somthing that has no effect on Washington at all. Can't they find a stinking 2% to cut anywhere else but S.S.
  • roberts  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 months ago
    The 2% cut does not reduce future benefits or hurt the SS trust fund. The Treasury has to make up the 2% with a payment to the fund. SO basically the governement is making the 2% payment. Of course there really is no trust fund because the money is already gone and replaced with IOU's from the Treasury anyways. That's why if you add in the missing (borrowed) funds from the trust the national debt is much higher than 15 Trillion. Wait till interest rates go up and the vig on the debt burries the taxpayers.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
    Once the bailouts and giveaways begin, it's difficult to stop them, and it's impossible in an election year.
  • LG  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 months ago
    Those of us who are benefiting from this payroll tax reduction should have our future social security benefits reduced. Why should our kids have to suffer because we can't be bothered to adequately fund the program?
  • mike  •  3 months ago
    The shell game continues by the democrats and the spineless wonder republicans wont act and call it what it really is, Robbing your eventual retirement benefits!
  • jeff  •  Hillsboro, Oregon  •  3 months ago
    Quit messing around and let this expire....we are going to have to work down the debt. It's time to start facing that
  • Anonymous  •  3 months ago
    Simple compromise - Just balance the 2% cut extension with a pay-in ceiling rise to $118K.
 
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