Posturing Escalates Before Work Begins on "Fiscal Cliff"

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By Leigh Ann Caldwell / CBS News

Talk tough but don't box yourself in. That seems to be the strategy that both sides are taking regarding the debate over taxes and the "fiscal cliff." The two main players, President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, traded barbs - albeit soft barbs - ahead of their first face-to-face meeting on the issue scheduled for Friday.

"Listen, there are a lot of issues on the table that have to be resolved by the end of the year. I think I've laid out a reasonable framework where both parties can work together and I am looking forward to running down to the White House on Friday and beginning that conversation," Boehner said Wednesday shortly after House Republicans reelected him as Speaker of the House.

Boehner's framework rejects the president's central tenet: raise taxes on the wealthy. In Mr. Obama's first news conference since Election Day - and his first since March - the president offered a solution Wednesday to temporarily preventing the fiscal cliff: extend the expiring tax cuts on those making less than $250,000.

"Step number one that we can take in the next couple of weeks - provide certainty to middle class families, 98 percent of families who make less than $250,000 a year - 97 percent of small businesses - that their taxes will not go up a single dime next year. Give them that certainty right now," Mr. Obama said.

If the president's plan passed, tax rates would remain the same for most Americans, but for those in the highest tax bracket, rates would raise from 35 percent to 39.6 percent.

Leaving subtleties behind, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell took to the Senate floor Thursday morning to slam a proposal recently floated by the White House that would increase taxes on the wealthy and corporations by $1.6 trillion.

"And let's be clear, an opening bid of $1.6 trillion in new taxes just isn't serious. It's more than Simpson-Bowles or any other bipartisan commission has called for," McConnell said. "It's twice as much as the white house seemed ready to agree to during last summer's debt ceiling talks."

"Listen, there are ways to put revenue on the table without increasing tax rates," Boehner reiterated.

As the country faces deep, automatic spending cuts that would cut social programs and defense and steep tax increases, Washington has less than two months to prevent the bottle neck of policies set to go into effect at the beginning of the year.

But central to the discussion is revenue. Republicans maintain their insistence against raising taxes on anyone but have conceded that the federal government can find additional revenue in other areas of the tax code, perhaps through closing loopholes and deductions. Democrats, meanwhile, insist that the massive deficit can not be closed without increasing taxes on the wealthy.

In an effort to put pressure on Republicans to move toward his position, Mr. Obama and his advisers have spent a better part of the week gaining consensus on his tax proposal. They have met at the White House with groups outside of government and leaders in the business community.

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Gee said on Thursday, Nov 15 at 12:18 PM

how about the white house shows us there seriuos and we see a 30% cuts there first starting with pay and retirement plans!!!!

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postering for what said on Thursday, Nov 15 at 2:50 PM

who sees the protologist first as their own asked?

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with all the sex scandals said on Thursday, Nov 15 at 3:47 PM

sounds like they are posturing and escalate at the thought of a fiscal stiff...

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