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

House speaker says payroll tax bill won't add jobs

Boehner backs compromise payroll tax cut, jobless benefits bill but says it won't create jobs

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Capitol Hill negotiators Thursday officially unveiled hard-fought compromise legislation to prevent 160 million workers from getting slapped with a payroll tax hike, but it ran into turbulence in the Senate, where Republicans withheld support and several Democrats attacked it.

The measure would also extend jobless benefits and is a top election-year priority for President Barack Obama. It generally won backing from his Democratic allies in Congress. But it's getting only grudging support from House Republicans and even less from Obama's GOP rivals in the Senate, where party negotiators shunned the measure and its $89 billion impact on the budget deficit over the coming decade.

"The typical American family will still see an extra $40 in every paycheck, keeping nearly $1,000 of their hard-earned money this year," Obama said in a statement. "And millions of Americans who are out pounding the pavement looking for new work to support their families will still be able to depend on the vital lifeline of unemployment insurance."

But support in the Senate, where Democrats control 53 votes, seemed soft. It will take 60 votes to advance the measure, and Democratic vote counters braced for defections. They also worried that Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky wasn't rounding up Republican votes.

Meanwhile, in the House, the top Republican said the $143 billion measure won't do anything to help the economy.

"Let's be honest, this is an economic relief package, not a bill that's going to grow the economy and create jobs," House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said. But after losing a fight over the legislation at the end of last year, Republicans were determined to clear it off of the political agenda and focus voters on Obama's record rather than their battles with him.

"It was impossible to break through on the politics," Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., said.

But several Democrats also came out publicly against the bill and others have privately signaled they're likely "nay" votes. Most noteworthy was Sen. Tom Harkin, who came out in "vehement opposition" to the measure over cuts to Obama's health care law and the reduction in a payroll tax that's dedicated to paying Social Security benefits. Deficit spending would make up for the lost revenue, but that was little solace to the Iowa liberal.

"Make no mistake about it, this is the beginning of the end of the sanctity of Social Security," Harkin said. "The very real risk is that Social Security will become just another program to be paid for with deficit spending, and then in the future, perhaps raided to help reduce the deficit."

The legislation would extend through the end of the year a 2 percentage-point cut in payroll taxes that would fatten a typical bimonthly paycheck by $40. It also would renew jobless benefits that deliver about $300 a week to people out of work for more than six months.

And it would head off a steep cut in reimbursements for physicians who treat Medicare patients, at a cost of $18 billion, financed in part by cuts to a fund created under Obama's 2010 health care law that awards grants for preventive care and by curbs on Medicaid payments to hospitals that care for a disproportionate share of uninsured patients.

The pact was sealed after weeks of negotiations, first a public round featuring speechifying and bickering, and then a more intense private round in which Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., and Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., took the lead. The two men, the respective chairmen of the House and Senate panel with jurisdiction over taxes, unemployment insurance and Medicare, have forged a close working relationship, even as top party leaders publicly traded salvos over the negotiations.

Combative Democrats like Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York openly boasted of the leverage Democrats carried into the talks. He almost seemed to welcome a reprise of a bruising December battle when House Republicans refused to back a bipartisan Senate bill providing a two-month extension of the tax cuts and jobless benefits to buy time for negotiations on a yearlong deal.

But Republicans had no interest in reprising their December experience, when they got their heads handed to them after a barrage of criticism from Republicans and conservatives around the country — featured almost every hour on 24-hour cable new networks.

GOP leaders gave the talks a major boost over the weekend by dropping a demand that the tax cut be paid for with spending cuts.

The move guaranteed that the measure wouldn't be popular with deficit hawks in either party. In addition to Harkin, Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Mark Warner, D-Va., also came out against the measure on Thursday.

According to a Congressional Budget Office estimate released Thursday, the measure would add $141 billion to the deficit during fiscal 2012-2013, with $52 billion of that cost gradually recouped over the coming decade.

Still, piling most of the measure's cost onto the $15 trillion-plus national debt meant negotiators had to find just $50 billion or so in revenues or spending cuts to finance renewing jobless benefits and fixing the Medicare payment rate.

About $15 billion came as free money to be raised by auctioning off parts of the broadcast television airwaves to wireless companies. Even more would be raised in upcoming auctions, but broadcast license holders would be compensated for giving up spectrum, while $7 billion would be dedicated to creating a new public safety network for emergency first responders. That would complete a key remaining recommendation of the commission that looked into the way emergency officials dealt with the 9/11 terror attacks.

The last major hang-up involved changes to a provision demanded by Republicans to require federal workers contribute more to their generous defined benefit pension plans. Most pension systems have switched to less generous but more mobile defined contribution plans.

The provision, modified to win support from key members of the Maryland delegation, requires newly-hired federal workers to contribute 2.3 percent more of their salaries toward their traditional defined benefit pensions, raising $15 billion over the coming decade.

Sen. Ben Cardin and Rep. Chris Van Hollen, two Maryland Democrats, had bitterly fought an earlier plan — tentatively agreed to by key Democrats like Baucus — that would have required current federal workers to contribute 1.5 percent more to their pensions.

"We will not let others find excuses to extend the gridlock," Van Hollen and Cardin said in a joint statement. "But it is inherently unfair that the primary offset found for extending unemployment insurance came from additional sacrifice from other middle-class families."

Republicans claimed victory in reducing the number of weeks of jobless benefits that workers would be eligible to receive. The maximum number in states with the highest jobless rates would be cut from 99 weeks to 73 weeks by the end of the year. Republicans had wanted to cut the maximum to 59 weeks. But in states with particularly high unemployment, such as Rhode Island and Nevada, the measure is actually more generous over the next few months than current law.

 

11 comments

  • cute  •  3 months ago
    Obama 4 more years...........................Gops, please pass the Job bills, we need Jobs....We know you will do the right thing...........................Smile
  • Rick  •  Akron, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    Who cares.... the fact is that it'll put a little more food on my table. $80 a month isn't much, but you take that away from millions and it could due more harm than good. Give the house speaker $30K a year to live on and lets see how fast he will change his mind! He doesn't need the cash therefore it "won't add jobs".
  • Larry  •  3 months ago
    Seriously? i cant use my benefits card at ATMs in strip clubs? Who would have thought that was a major problem. Strippers never get a break do they?
  • steve  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    lets be HONEST john boehner, you and the rest of the republican controlled congress presently do not want our country to have more jobs, you presently want our ecomomy to fail, and you will do anything in your power to hold our economy back. You do not care if you are hurting the middleclass that are presently struggling to support families. you are out of touch with the real people. I'm sure your living the high life.
    • David B 3 months ago
      Sorry, Steve, but you are way off base. John Boehner and a lot of Republicans like him know what it is like to work for a living, compared to most of the Democratic elite that currently run the country and have never held a real job. The Republicans have voted to scale back an overly ambitious EPA that is implementing policies that will raise electric rates for every family. The Republicans have voted for policies that will create jobs, like drilling for oil and building pipelines, but the Democrats have blocked these initiatives. Republicans are not out of touch with real people any more than the elite liberals in the Democratic party. And I would argue that they are less out of touch. The Republicans want to have jobs in this country, but the Democrats are implementing policies that destroy jobs while talking and acting like they want them here. They don't care, they just want to take away our freedoms, promote dependency and take away people's dignity by not allowing them to support themselves. The Democrats are only interested in becoming dictators. You are sadly mistaken if you don't see it.
  • Duke  •  3 months ago
    Wow ...Just heard on the news , record profits for General Motors..Isn't that the company Obama saved ? I'm not an economist but won't that create a few jobs? Can you really take Republicans seriously ?
    • ANONYMOUS 3 months ago
      Yes we can take the GOP. They are not into bailing out losers like Obama. Obama was paying back the big money from auto unions if you were ignorant of that fact.
    • Garrett 3 months ago
      Duke,
      In case you hadn't heard, American taxpayers have lost billions on the bailout of GM and its union bosses. The US owns 26.5% of GM stock at a cost of $54 per share. The current price of GM's stock is $27 which means taxpayers have lost 1/2 their investment.
    • YOUBETCHA 3 months ago
      And Don't Forget GM's 5 year Tax Holiday (Search on the article in Ward's Auto World). Since you are no economist, find one and learn how "Record" Profits can be made with LOW EXPENSES (When the TaxPayers cover them) JUST AS WELL as high INCOME (only 11% more revenue for 62% more profit). Smoke, mirrors, send the bills to the Taxpayer.
  • Scott  •  3 months ago
    Yeah, he'd rather give it to the wealthiest 5,000 people in the country, who are the ones he really works for, and let it "trickle down."
  • z  •  3 months ago
    The GOP has been blocking everything Obama has done to clean up their MESS.

    An Election year sure makes a difference to get these RATS moving to do something positive for the USA. You can bet when Obama gets re-elected again they will go back to their old ways of blocking everything again.
  • Thomas  •  Champlain, New York  •  3 months ago
    "Let's be honest, this is an economic relief package, not a bill that's going to grow the economy and create jobs," House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio
    Let's be honest, it is a tax cut for all of the 99% who typically does not give Mr. Boehner any $!
  • MR. INDEPENDENT.  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    Bush tax cuts 95% going to top 1% good for the country tax cuts for the poor and middle class bad idea thats all you need to know to understand the gop mind.
  • z  •  3 months ago
    The GOP rats blinked. lol

    Republicans had no interest in reprising their December experience, when they got their heads handed to them after a barrage of criticism from Republicans and conservatives around the country.
  • ANONYMOUS  •  Livingston, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
    Democrats, are you too stupid to be outraged of Socialist Obama's power grab. If it does not bother you that Democrats want to control your lives, your beliefs, your birth control freedoms, etc. then you are really sad people. What will you do if the next government were as controlling as democrats and force you to provide firearms to your employees? Can you grasp how insidious it is to allow government any control over our lives. History shows EVERY TIME it will grow and grow and keep taking and taking and finally collapse from a revolution or from within. HOW DARE YOU DEMOCRATS ALLOW YOUR oBAMA TO FORCE US ALL TO BUY ABORTION PILLS FOR ANYONE WHO WANTS IT. BUY YOUR OWN PILLS YOU LOSERS.
    • z 3 months ago
      I would rather have the Democrats in control than the REPUBLICAN WACKOS controling my life, beliefs and freedom, etc. You RIGHTIES are all a little touched in the head.
    • z 3 months ago
      Duh, ANONYMOUS...... I never knew males took ABORTION PILLS, you must be an exception. lol
 
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