Mon, May 28, 2012, 12:24 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

House leaders praise emerging payroll tax cut deal

Boehner, Pelosi praise emerging deal on payroll taxes, jobless benefits but say work continues

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congressional leaders of both parties praised an emerging deal Wednesday to extend a payroll tax cut and extra jobless benefits through 2012, but cautioned that bargainers still had to nail down final details.

The rare, bipartisan consensus reflected a desire by both parties to put the long-running drama over the issue to rest and a shared sense that their tentative agreement was probably the best deal they could get. The pact came together after House Republicans conceded that the roughly $100 billion payroll tax cut would not have to be paid for with spending cuts.

"I do expect, if the agreement comes together like I expect it will, the House should vote this week," House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, told reporters.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Democrats were pleased that the package will extend the payroll tax cut and extra jobless benefits and block a 27 percent cut in doctors' Medicare reimbursements. Without action, the tax cut, added unemployment benefits and current rate of Medicare benefits would otherwise expire March 1.

 

"We're way down the road from where we were just a few days ago," she said in a brief interview.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., one of the bargainers on the legislation, said there were "just a couple of little wrinkles" left that he believed would be resolved on Wednesday.

"I think a lot of people realize Congress is not enjoying a great reputation," he told reporters. "Both sides recognized the need to get this done."

Lawmakers said among the unresolved items were details of the savings to be used to pay for about $50 billion of the roughly $150 billion package.

Once finalized, the measure would be an election-year victory for President Barack Obama, who made the payroll tax cut a keystone of his largely ignored jobs creation plan in September.

On Tuesday, House Republicans emerging from a closed-door meeting said reaction to the package was generally positive, with some saying it reflected a desire to avoid spending months debating an issue that cost them dearly last year.

In December, the House GOP initially opposed a two-month extension of the tax cut and other benefits that were about to lapse, only to retreat under pressure from outside party leaders and conservatives.

"We've got to move onto another issue," said Rep. Dennis Ross, R-Fla. "I think that's what the mood is."

Republicans were determined that Obama not be able to claim that the GOP was standing in the way of a middle-class tax cut. They would rather spend the months leading up to the November presidential and congressional elections focused on GOP themes of opposing tax increases, higher spending and Obama administration regulations that they say stifle job creation.

The tentative compromise would extend through December the current 2 percentage-point cut in the usual 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax deducted from workers' paychecks. That reduction, which saves $1,000 a year for families earning $50,000, would affect 160 million workers and would otherwise expire on March 1.

Excluded, aides said, was a collection of expiring tax breaks, largely for businesses buying equipment and other corporate expenses that had been sought by some lawmakers of both parties.

Participants said the Medicare payments to doctors would be paid for by reducing Medicare reimbursements to hospitals and by cutting about $5 billion from an $8 billion program under Obama's health care overhaul aimed at battling obesity and smoking.

The unemployment benefits would be financed with a collection of savings that include government sales of parts of the broadcast airwaves to wireless companies and from boosting federal workers' contributions to their pensions.

In private, some Democrats called it a victory, pointing to the payroll tax cut and unemployment benefit extensions while heading off the GOP's earlier demand that the entire measure be financed with spending cuts and other savings. Others complained that the jobless benefit extensions were not generous enough.

Republicans claimed victory, too, noting their rejection of early Democratic efforts to pay for the payroll tax cut by boosting taxes on millionaires, and with jobless extensions that would be less than the 99 weeks under current law that Democrats wanted to renew.

Aides said the current 99-week maximum would fall gradually to 73 weeks by late summer in states with the worst unemployment, though a GOP aide said most states' ceiling would be 63 weeks. Republicans had wanted to cut the maximum to 59 weeks.

Republicans abandoned provisions from a House-passed bill that would have required the jobless to pursue a high school equivalency degree to get benefits and let states require recipients to undergo drug testing.

States would be able to test applicants who lost their job because they failed a drug test or are seeking a job that requires one.

They also dropped other House-passed language forcing low-income people to have Social Security numbers to get government checks by claiming the children's tax credit, a move that was aimed at illegal immigrants and caused a furor among many Hispanics.

Early Tuesday, Obama tried turning up the heat on Republicans to strike a deal.

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

___

Associated Press writers Jim Abrams, Andrew Taylor and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar contributed to this report.

 
  • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
    Politicians like handing out favors in an election year. Who knew?
  • DONALD N  •  Romeoville, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    An accident that wiped out all these crooks and liars in DC would be a blessing for this nation.
    • Agitated American 3 months ago
      Agreed maybe it could be a small thing just injuries that kept them from serving.... us up on a plate ......anymore this year.
    • S 3 months ago
      especially if it happened on purpose...
  • PoorPatriot  •  3 months ago
    When Boehner and Pelosi are excited about the same legislation.....it's time to get out the broom and start sweeping!
  • Arumugam  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  3 months ago
    House leaders - Praising themselves ? For being so inefficient and selfish.
  • DH  •  3 months ago
    Spending as usual. Both sides of the aisle.
    • Global Cooling 3 months ago
      Start cuts with the seniors to whom the politicians pander. 54%!!! of Federal Revenue (34% of total spending) goes directly to seniors, including universal health care that they love when it's called "Medicare" and hate when it's called "Obamacare".
    • Triumph 3 months ago
      Global, I think your brain has frozen. Start by cutting subsidies to those who will not work and those that pay no taxes. 99 weeks unemployment what a joke. Seniors have worked their entire life in most cases, paid into the system, supported you through the early years of your life and deserve respect. They are not the cause of the problem only a highly visable target. Stop Obama care, take care of those who cannot help themself, and let the people who would not work in a pie factory, even if allowed to eat all the pie they want, fend for themself.
    • DH 3 months ago
      Agreed, Triumph. Cut out hand outs for no effort first. Medicare has to be fixed, but the part that's broken is only about the last 18 months of an advancing seniors life. My elderly mother is healthy, but she has to fight off the doctor's office that's always wanting to do more "procedures" just to check. My gosh, she's moving toward 90. And develop a defense budget, get out of being so danged offensive. And quit stealing from SS fund. There's a lot that could be done before harming those that actually need some assistance.
  • A.  •  3 months ago
    Vote the next batch of pandering, bailout-drunk incumbents out in November. Repeat as needed.
    • F Berry 3 months ago
      Thats the plan I also constructed that might have any affect on our status. If we do not implemeant this voting practice, stand by for the complete downfall of the U.S............
    • CA girl 3 months ago
      Lets throw them out and vote to put them back to a PART-TIME position-they don't work half the time anyway!!!
    • Vmag83 3 months ago
      Amen to that - over and over and over again...
  • fififi  •  3 months ago
    So this was done so that neither side would be tagged with tax increases. Politics as usual.
    • orez 3 months ago
      Yeah you guys got sold out alright. They should have paid for it like Obama wanted
      to. Conservatives! You can't live with them and you can' t stop poor white
      people from voting for them.
    • fififi 3 months ago
      Hey, I'm a middle of the road Independent, but it is pretty obvious that both sides are pandering to the masses to get re elected and want to take credit for helping the middle class by keeping the SS tax at 4.2%. It's an election year after all.
    • Private 3 months ago
      Time for Obama and Congress all to go.
  • AndrewDouglas  •  Norwalk, Connecticut  •  3 months ago
    Spending other people's money is easy.
    • K 3 months ago
      ... and fun
    • WilliamM 3 months ago
      And it's not even other people's money; they are borrowing it from future generations. The gutless wonders.
    • Private 3 months ago
      Spending my young kids future earnings.
  • anon  •  3 months ago
    Let's do this. Find out who your congressman/woman is and make sure they don't get re-elected! Done! Reset!
  • NightShift  •  Cookeville, Tennessee  •  3 months ago
    ALL POLITICIANS SUCK!
  • Grafelfing  •  Traverse City, Michigan  •  3 months ago
    Well just a month or so ago our Debt broke $15.0 trillion, now its at $15.4 Trillion and counting and this 'cut' will make it $15.5 trillion. We should break $16 trillion by year end and racing for $17 trillion probably within a year! No problem! In your face Greece, you spendthrift chumps!
  • Another Fine Mess  •  3 months ago
    When both sides claim victory you just know us taxpayers are somehow getting the shaft.
  • jacob  •  3 months ago
    What's there to be proud of they are now underfunding S.S. The shell game continues.
  • Donato  •  3 months ago
    Since when are jobless benefits generous? What class of people are they creating?
  • LanceS  •  Brush Prairie, Washington  •  3 months ago
    As the old saying goes: We have one party that is stupid and one that is evil. Once in a while they are able to come to agreement on something that is both evil and stupid. That is called "bipartisanship".
  • DONALD N  •  Romeoville, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    Less funding for SS?. How dumb is this plan when the SS is already underfunded.
  • Robert  •  3 months ago
    I know let's pretend we do not owe a gagillion dollars we can never pay back. And let us pretend that we are not making it worse every day and let us pretend that this nonsense from both parties is anything but crap
  • jra  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Stupid stuff- they are gutting social security in the long run to give people a paltry 20.00 a week??
    Insane
  • wooglin  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
    How about an INCOME tax cut rather than a payroll tax cut. We all know social security is not in great shape...not the time to CONTINUE TO CUT payments into social security. Cut income taxes...oh that would directly affect our gov't instead of sticking it to the working class by reducing on a per person basis the amount flowing into social security. Just great.
  • FKU  •  3 months ago
    Please call it what it is - a 33 1/3% cut to social security funding. You know, that program that everyone is saying is in trouble that allows seniors to eat?
 
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