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Tax cut
survives:
Congress
votes
holiday
approval
By
ANDREW
TAYLOR
Associated
Press
WASHINGTON
- Barely
beating
Santa's
sleigh,
Congress
delivered
a
last-minute
holiday
tax-cut
extension
to 160
million
American
wage-earners
on
Friday,
just
when it
looked
like
they and
millions
of
unemployed
workers
were
going to
be left
with
coal in
their
stockings.
It was a
major
yearend
political
victory
for
President
Barack
Obama, a
big
slice of
humble
pie for
House
Republicans
and a
blow to
House
Speaker
John
Boehner,
R-Ohio,
who'll
have an
angry
band of
tea
party
lawmakers
to deal
with
when
Congress
returns
to
Washington
next
month.
Back-to-back
voice
vote
approvals
of the
two-month
special
measure
by the
Senate
and
House
came in
mere
seconds
with no
debate,
just
days
after
House
Republican
leaders
had
insisted
that
reopening
negotiations
on a
full-year
bill was
the only
way to
persuade
them to
prevent
a tax
increase
on Jan.
1.
Obama
immediately
signed
the bill
into
law.
"I said
it was
critical
for
Congress
not to
go home
without
preventing
a tax
increase
on 160
million
working
Americans
and I'm
pleased
to say
that
they got
it
done," a
buoyant
looking
Obama
said at
the
White
House
before
dashing
off for
his
delayed
holiday
vacation
to his
home
state of
Hawaii.
Actually
most
lawmakers
were
long
gone. A
token
few
showed
up to
make
approval
official.
The
legislation
buys
time for
talks
early
next
year on
how to
finance
the
year-long
extensions
-
negotiations
that
promise
to be
contentious,
especially
if
Democrats
continue
to use
Obama's
jobs
agenda
to seek
a
political
edge in
the 2012
presidential
and
congressional
campaigns.
The
measure
will
keep in
place a
2
percentage
point
cut in
the
Social
Security
payroll
tax -
worth
about
$20 a
week for
a
typical
worker
making
$50,000
a year -
and
prevent
almost 2
million
unemployed
people
from
losing
jobless
benefits
averaging
$300 a
week.
Doctors
will win
a
reprieve
from a
27
percent
cut in
their
Medicare
payments,
the
product
of a
1997 cut
that
Congress
has been
unable
to
permanently
fix.
Republicans
did
claim a
major
victory,
winning
a
provision
that
would
require
Obama to
make a
swift
decision
on
whether
to
approve
construction
of the
Canada-to-Texas
Keystone
XL oil
pipeline,
which
could
generate
thousands
of
construction
jobs. To
stop
construction,
Obama,
who had
wanted
to put
the
decision
off
until
after
the 2012
election,
would
have to
declare
it was
not in
the
nation's
interest.
On
Friday,
an
expressionless
Boehner
read
from a
piece of
paper
before
him,
gaveled
the
House's
last
session
of the
year
closed
and
stepped
off the
podium
on the
Democratic
side.
Boehner
had been
open to
the
Senate's
version
of the
legislation
a week
ago,
even
though
it would
have
punted
the
issue
into
February
and
given
Democrats
a proven
political
issue.
But tea
party
forces
and some
in his
own
leadership
revolted,
insisting
on
picking
a
holiday
fight
with
Democrats,
and
Boehner
felt no
choice
but to
go
along.
The
battle
turned
out to
be a
loser
for
House
Republicans,
earning
the ire
of swing
voters
and many
in the
GOP
establishment,
but when
Boehner
capitulated
on
Thursday
he then
felt the
lash
from
hard-core
conservatives.
"Even
though
there is
plenty
of
evidence
this is
a bad
deal for
America
... the
House
has
caved
yet
again to
the
president
and
Senate
Democrats,"
said
Rep. Tim
Huelskamp,
R-Kan.
Meanwhile,
Democratic
Senate
leader
Harry
Reid of
Nevada
did a
victory
lap,
twisting
the
knife
into tea
party
Republicans.
"I hope
this
Congress
has had
a very
good
learning
experience,
especially
those
who are
newer to
this
body,"
Reid
said.
"Everything
we do
around
here
does not
have to
wind up
in a
fight."
A
full-year
extension
of the
tax cut
had been
embraced
by
virtually
every
lawmaker
in both
the
House
and
Senate
but had
been
derailed
in a
quarrel
over
demands
by House
Republicans.
Senate
leaders
of both
parties
had
tried to
barter
their
own
yearlong
agreement
a week
ago but
failed,
instead
agreeing
upon a
60-day
measure
to buy
time for
talks
next
year.
House
GOP
arguments
about
the
legislative
process
and what
the
"uncertainty"
of a
two-month
extension
would
mean for
businesses
seemed
lame to
many
people
when
compared
to the
consequences
of
raising
taxes
and
cutting
off
jobless
benefits
in the
middle
of the
holiday
season,
and
Obama
and the
Democrats
were
hard on
the
offensive.
House
Republicans
finally
resorted
to a
technical
fix and
the fact
that
Reid
would
name
negotiators
on the
GOP's
yearlong
measure
as
reasons
to
reverse
course
and
embrace
the
Senate
measure.
Friday's
House
and
Senate
sessions
were
remarkable.
Both
chambers
had
essentially
recessed
for the
year,
but
leaders
in both
parties
orchestrated
passage
of the
short-term
agreement
under
debate
rules
that
would
allow
any
individual
member
of
Congress
to
derail
the
pact, at
least
for a
time.
None
did.
The
developments
were a
clear
win for
Obama.
The
payroll
tax cut
was the
centerpiece
of his
three-month,
campaign-style
drive
for jobs
legislation
that
seems to
have
contributed
to an
uptick
in his
poll
numbers
- and
taken a
toll on
those of
congressional
Republicans.
The
two-month
version's
$33
billion
cost
will be
covered
by a 0.1
percentage
point
increase
on
guarantee
fees on
new home
loans
backed
by
mortgage
giants
Fannie
Mae,
Freddie
Mac and
Ginnie
Mae - at
a likely
cost of
about
$17 a
month
for a
homeowner
with a
$200,000
mortgage.
The top
Senate
Republican,
Mitch
McConnell
of
Kentucky,
was a
driving
force
behind
the
final
agreement,
imploring
Boehner
to
accept
the deal
that
McConnell
and Reid
had
struck
last
week and
passed
with
overwhelming
support
in both
parties.
Even
though
GOP
leaders
including
House
Majority
Leader
Eric
Cantor,
R-Va.,
promised
that the
two
sides
could
quickly
iron out
their
differences,
the
truth is
that it
will
take
intense
talks to
figure
out both
the
spending
cuts and
fee
increases
required
to
finance
the
longer
measure.
Republicans
want to
shorten
the
maximum
length
of
unemployment
benefits
from 99
to 79
weeks,
freeze
the pay
of
federal
civilian
workers
and make
federal
workers
contribute
more
into
their
pensions
- all
ideas
considered
by the
failed
debt
"supercommittee"
this
fall.
The main
provisions
of the
yearlong
House
measure
cost
about
$200
billion,
and the
final
version
could
cost
more.
Reid
signaled
a hard
line for
the
House-Senate
talks by
assigning
Sen. Ben
Cardin,
D-Md. -
a strong
advocate
for
federal
workers
- to the
Democratic
negotiating
team.
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