Republicans in the House of Representatives approved the extension
of all Bush-era tax cuts, including deeply polarizing cuts for the wealthiest
Americans, in a mostly symbolic presidential election year move Wednesday
Republicans
said the cuts could help shore up a still-frail U.S. economy, while the Obama
administration warned that threatened budget cuts could send some of America's
troops into battle with less training.
For all the
action and talk, however, both taxes and spending were deeply enmeshed in
campaign politics, with no resolution expected until after the November
elections. The House measure has no chance of passing the Democrat-controlled
Senate or surviving an Obama veto.
The vote was
more about political messaging three months before the election than a genuine
attempt to resolve longstanding differences that threaten to hit Americans with
a tax increase if the deadlock isn't broken in a post-election session.
Democrats
are demanding that any compromise to avoid the $110 billion in budget cuts that
are scheduled to kick in Jan. 2 include a tax increase on high-income earners,
returning tax rates on the richest Americans to pre-President George W. Bush
levels.
Republicans
reject the idea of raising rates on anyone as the economy struggles to recover
fully from recession. Democrats said Republicans were holding the middle class
hostage by insisting on renewing tax cuts that go to the top 2 percent of
earners. Polls show most Americans support the Democrats' position.
Deputy
Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told the committee that if Congress fails to
come up with a compromise, nearly all elements of the military will be affected
by cuts mandated by a deal struck last year to reduce the deficit. Training
would be scaled back and flying hours for Air Force pilots would be reduced.
The Navy would buy fewer ships and the Air Force fewer aircraft.
"Some
later-deploying units (including some deploying to Afghanistan) could receive
less training, especially in the Army and Marine Corps," Carter said.
"Under some circumstances, this reduced training could impact their
ability to respond to a new contingency, should one occur." Military
personnel would be exempt from job cuts, but furloughs might be issued and
commissary hours reduced, he said.
Later,
Republicans moved to renew the Bush tax cuts for every working American. The
cuts will otherwise expire Dec. 31, part of a combination of effects along with
major spending cuts that have been characterized as a "fiscal cliff"
for the economy. The bill passed by a 256-171 vote. Nineteen Democrats joined
with Republicans.
There is no
expectation that the Democratic-led Senate will even consider the House
measure, at least before the elections.
Democrats in
the House countered with a plan backed by President Obama to extend the tax
cuts for all but the highest-earning Americans. Their plan would raise the
marginal top tax rate on incomes over $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for
couples from 35% to 39.6%. It failed, 257-170, with 19 Democrats breaking with
Obama.
Two years
ago, the Bush tax cuts were renewed in their entirety with the support of Obama
and many Democrats as part of a bargain in which Obama also won a Social Security
payroll tax cut and an extension of unemployment benefits.
Now, the
White House promises Obama will veto the extension if it includes the highest
earners. Obama instead supports a plan that passed the Democratic-controlled
Senate last week.
Republicans
said that measure would hit 1 million small businesses — and more than half of
small business income — with a tax increase.
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