Obama & Senate, House Leaders
Agree on Sharp Spending Cuts and All Tax Loopholes Remain
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By Lori
Montgomery and Paul Kane, WP) August 1, 2011 ―
President Obama and congressional leaders Sunday night sealed a deal to raise
the federal debt limit that includes sharp spending cuts with all tax loopholes
remaining, breaking a partisan impasse that has driven the nation to the brink
of a government default.
The agreement brings to an end a self-created crisis that has consumed
Washington, rattled Wall Street, and shaken confidence in the American political
system at home and abroad. The deal could clear Congress as soon as tonight —
barely 24 hours before Treasury officials have said they could begin running
short of cash to pay the nation’s bills.
Passage of the agreement, however, remained far from certain in the House, where
skeptical Republicans were just beginning to digest the details.
“This process has been messy. It’s taken far too long,” President Obama said in
brief remarks at the White House. “Nevertheless, ultimately, the leaders of both
parties have found their way toward compromise, and I want to thank them for
that.”
Obama said the agreement “will allow us to avoid default and end the crisis that
Washington imposed on the rest of America. It ensures also we will not face this
same kind of crisis again in six months, or eight months, or12 months. And it
will begin to lift the cloud of debt and the cloud of uncertainty that hangs
over our economy.”
The deal was negotiated primarily by Vice President Biden and Senate Minority
Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). It teetered all day on the edge of completion as
House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) bickered with Democrats over whether to
freeze next year’s defense budget.
In the end, Boehner conceded the point, and Obama finalized the agreement in
phone calls to each of the four congressional leaders shortly after 8 p.m.
The agreement would raise the $14.3 trillion debt limit in two stages by as much
as $2.4 trillion. It represents a victory for Obama, allowing him to avoid
another grueling fight over the debt limit in the heat of the 2012 presidential
campaign.
But he failed to secure other top priorities, including fresh measures to revive
the flagging recovery and an end to tax breaks for corporations and the wealthy.
Obama said he would pursue those goals later this year, when, under the terms of
the deal, a new congressional committee would begin searching for further ways
to control the national debt.
“The ultimate solution to our deficit problem must be balanced,” Obama said
Sunday. “That’s why the second part of this agreement is so important.”
Republicans, by contrast, won severe cuts to agency budgets over the next decade
and the prospect of deeper cuts to come, delivering on the campaign promises
that helped them gain control of the House in the fall congressional elections.
Democrats also agreed to stage a vote on a balanced-budget amendment, which has
become a rallying point for tea-party-aligned conservatives.
End of the impasse
The deal ends a painful political stalemate that had been in the making since
the new GOP majority took control of the House in January. After a bitter
showdown over this year’s budget nearly shut down the government in April, the
parties launched into the debt-limit battle.
At several points, Obama and Boehner held out hope they could agree on a
far-reaching bipartisan plan to tame the soaring national debt once and for all
by raising taxes and cutting health and retirement spending. But House
Republicans repeatedly walked away from the bargaining table, refusing to end
tax looholes. In the end, policymakers were left with a far more modest
achievement that does little more than resolve the immediate crisis.
On Sunday, party leaders wearily took what they could get.
“There is now a framework to review that will ensure significant cuts in
Washington spending,” McConnell said in a speech on the Senate floor. “And we
can assure the American people tonight the United States of America will not for
the first time in our history default on its obligations.”
Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) also welcomed the deal.
“I’m relieved to say leaders from both parties have come together for the sake
of our economy to reach a historic bipartisan compromise that ends this
dangerous standoff,” he said.
McConnell and Reid were laying plans for a vote as soon as Monday afternoon.
Opposition in the Senate appeared to be melting. Liberals were not enthusiastic
about the agreement, but the biggest potential roadblock — tea party Republicans
who had threatened to block Senate action — said they would permit the measure
to move forward.
If approved by the Senate, the measure would move to the House, where Boehner
hopes to hold a vote as soon as Monday night, he told GOP lawmakers in a
conference call late Sunday. Boehner and his entire leadership team endorsed the
plan and encouraged rank-and-file Republicans to do the same.
“If I wrote this myself, it would look different. But I wouldn’t agree to it or
put it on the floor if it violated our principles or would hurt the economy,”
Boehner said, according to Republicans who participated in the call. “I’m not
celebrating, but I’m going to hail the courage of all of you for helping us take
this giant step forward.”
According to officials in both parties, the deal would raise the debt limit in
two stages. The first increase would total $900 billion, with the Treasury
gaining access to $400 billion in additional borrowing authority immediately.
The other $500 billion would come later this fall — unless two-thirds of the
members of both chambers of Congress objected — permitting the Treasury to pay
the bills through early next year.
The second increase would raise the debt limit by at least $1.2 trillion, also
subject to a resolution of congressional. That process would place the entire
burden for a debt-limit increase on the White House, because Congress is likely
to vote to disapprove the request, forcing Obama to veto it. But the process
virtually guarantees the debt limit will rise, because Republicans lack the
votes in the Senate to override Obama’s veto.
The agreement would also cut agency spending by roughly $900 billion over the
next decade and create a new legislative committee to come up with at least $1.2
trillion in additional savings by the end of this year. For days, the chief
obstacle to a deal was the design of a mechanism to force the committee to act —
or to make sure spending cuts were adopted if the committee failed.
In the end, negotiators settled on a trigger that would force automatic
across-the-board cuts of $1.2 trillion to agency budgets over the next decade,
split half and half between domestic programs and defense. Programs for the
poor, including Medicaid and Social Security, would be exempted. But Medicare
payments to providers could be hit.
Liberal doubts
Liberals were not enthusiastic about the package, arguing it represents
surrender on all their top priorities, including pledges to protect Medicare and
to end tax breaks for the rich.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) withheld comment, saying she would
confer with House Democrats on Monday. Rep. Raul M. Grijalva (D-Ariz.), who
heads the 74-member Congressional Progressive Caucus, was blunt about his
opposition.
“This deal trades peoples’ livelihoods for the votes of a few unappeasable
right-wing radicals, and I will not support it,” he said.
But a bigger stumbling block may be Republicans on the House Armed Services
Committee and the Appropriations subcommittee on defense. The two chairmen of
those panels, Reps. Howard P. “Buck” McKeon (R-Calif.) and C.W. Bill Young (R-Fla.),
held a joint news conference Saturday, vowing to oppose any long-term reduction
in defense spending that exceeds $439 billion over the next 10 years. Anything
larger “stops with this committee,” McKeon said.
Veterans such as McKeon and Young are the base of Boehner’s support within the
House Republican conference, and Boehner is likely to need to win their votes to
pass the debt-limit deal, even if Pelosi provides a significant bloc of
Democrats.
On Sunday’s House conference call, some lawmakers expressed concern about the
proposed Pentagon cuts. But most expressed support for the deal, and aides were
cautiously optimistic the proposal would pass with Democratic support.
Staff writers Walter Pincus, Felicia Sonmez and Rosalind S. Helderman
contributed to this report.