House
Approves Tax
Cut Deal
WASHINGTON
and SANTA
FE, NM
(Lisa
Mascaro,
LAT)
December 17,
2010
―
The House
approved
President
Obama's
sweeping
tax-cut
compromise
at midnight
Thursday,
preventing
tax rates
from rising
Jan. 1 and
sending the
president a
bipartisan
agreement
that few
could have
imagined in
deeply
polarized
Washington.
The vote to
accept the
$858-billion
Senate-passed
measure was
277 to 148.
Now it goes
to the
president
for his
signature,
which is
expected to
be swift.
Obama
campaigned
incessantly
for passage
despite his
opposition
to extending
the George
W. Bush-era
lower tax
rates across
the board,
including on
family
income above
$250,000.
Shortly
after the
bill passed,
Treasury
Secretary
Timothy F.
Geithner
issued a
statement
calling it
"good for
growth, good
for jobs,
good for
working and
middle-class
families,
and good for
businesses
looking to
invest and
expand their
workforce."
House
passage of
the Senate
bill cleared
the way for
further
action this
weekend.
Senate
Majority
Leader Harry
Reid (D-Nev.)
called for
votes
Saturday to
advance a
youth
immigration
bill known
as the Dream
Act and a
repeal of
the "don't
ask, don't
tell" policy
against gays
serving
openly in
the
military.
All day
Thursday,
House
members
struggled to
reach final
passage and
overcome a
persistent
protest from
liberal
lawmakers
incensed
over the tax
deal's
benefits for
the nation's
wealthiest
earners.
Democratic
leaders
worked to
allow
liberal
opponents a
way to
register
their
objection,
but wanted
to avoid any
change that
would send
the bill
back to the
Senate with
so little
time
remaining in
the
lame-duck
Congress.
Liberal
House
Democrats
were
particularly
opposed to a
$68-billion
provision
that would
reinstate
the estate
tax at a 35%
rate on
estates
above $5
million for
singles and
$10 million
for
families.
Democrats
pushed until
late
Thursday for
a 45% rate,
with
exemptions
on estates
below $3.5
million for
singles and
$7 million
for families
the rate
that was in
place until
the tax
lapsed at
the end of
2010.
In the end,
House
leaders
agreed to
permit a
vote on just
one
amendment
on the
estate tax.
It failed,
233 to 194,
with most
Republicans
and several
dozen
Democrats
voting no.
The House
then
approved the
Senate bill,
with nearly
equal
numbers of
Democrats
and
Republicans
supporting
it.
But the
debate that
preceded the
votes was
bitter.
Rep. Linda
T. Sanchez
(D-Lakewood)
called the
package
"reckless."
Rep. Jay
Inslee
(D-Wash.)
decried its
"deja-voodoo
economics."
Rep. Eric
Cantor (R-Va.)
urged
colleagues
to "put
politics
aside" to
ensure that
tax breaks
set to
expire Dec.
31 would
continue.
The package
contains a
two-year
extension of
income tax
cuts
approved
during the
Bush
administration,
including
for earnings
above
$250,000 for
families and
$200,000 for
individuals,
along with
direct aid
to jobless
workers and
stimulus
measures
that
Republicans
largely
oppose.
Dividends
and capital
gains would
continue to
receive
Bush-era tax
breaks.
Middle-income
Americans
would see a
one-year cut
in payroll
taxes, from
6.2% to
4.2%, that
would place
up to $2,000
in workers'
pockets.
Democrats
were in the
uncomfortable
position of
approving
tax cuts
they had
long opposed
on grounds
that breaks
for the
wealthy
drive up the
national
debt.
"I beg this
body to
defeat this
bill," Rep.
Gene Taylor
(D-Miss.)
said during
debate,
drawing
applause on
the House
floor.
Republicans
wrestled
with the
political
reality that
the package
contains the
type of
stimulus
measures
they opposed
during the
midterm
election
campaign.
Despite
grass-roots
opposition
to
government
spending,
Republicans
in the tax
deal have
agreed to
renewable
energy
grants and
$56 billion
in extended
unemployment
benefits
through 2011
for as many
as 7 million
jobless
Americans.
"I don't
like this
bill," said
Rep. David
Dreier
(R-San
Dimas). "I
don't know
of anyone
who stood up
and said
they like
this bill."
Moreover,
the cost of
the package
is neither
covered nor
offset
anywhere in
the federal
budget,
adding to
the national
debt at a
time when a
bipartisan
fiscal
commission
has just
released a
stark report
on the need
to rein in
deficit
spending.
Earlier in
the evening,
Reid
withdrew a
trillion-dollar
spending
bill that
had been
intended to
avert a
government
shutdown
this
weekend.
It became
bogged down
over
earmarks,
with
Republicans
pledging to
consume the
rest of the
Senate
session
debating the
bill.
Instead,
Reid said he
would work
with the GOP
to offer a
short-term
spending
bill that
would fund
the
government
into next
year.
Republicans
called the
large
spending
bill
bloated,
even though
many of the
earmarks had
been
requested by
GOP
senators.