President Barack Obama signs the Budget Control Act of 2011 in the Oval Office, Aug. 2, 2011.
/ White HouseUpdated 3:12 p.m. Eastern Time
President Obama signed a hard-fought, last-minute compromise bill to avert economic catastrophe Tuesday, saying the deal to cut spending and increase the nation's $14.3 trillion debt limit marked an "important first step to ensuring that as a nation we live within our means."
The bill, he said, was the outcome of a "long and contentious debate" to avoid a man-made economic disaster that he described as creating "unsettling" economic uncertainty. He said that while voters chose divided government, "they sure didn't vote for dysfunctional government."
"It shouldn't take the risk of default, the risk of economic catastrophe, to get folks in this town to get together and do their jobs," the president said. He added: "Our economy didn't need Washington to come along with a manufactured crisis to make things worse."(watch Mr. Obama's full remarks at left)Mr. Obama signed the legislation Tuesday afternoon after making remarks in the White House Rose Garden. It will effectively increase the nation's borrowing authority through the end of next year and promises more than $2 trillion in deficit reduction over ten years.
Now that the debt limit fight is effectively over, Mr. Obama and congressional Democrats say they will pivot to a focus on jobs and the economy, which they say should be Congress' top priority.
"We've got to do everything in our power to grow this economy and put Americans back to work," Mr. Obama said Tuesday. He called on Congress to extend middle class tax cuts and unemployment benefits, pass trade deals and plow money into infrastructure when it returns from its August recess.
The Obama administration had warned that if lawmakers did not act on the debt limit by midnight, the nation would no longer be able to pay many of its obligations - potentially including social security checks, military pay and other payments - and could default on its debt, causing worldwide economic chaos as well as increased borrowing costs for Americans.
CBSNews.com special report: America's debt battle
The Senate passed the bill 74-26 shortly before Mr. Obama made his remarks, easily surpassing the 60 votes needed to overcome a filibuster. That vote followed Monday night passage in the House, which included a surprise affirmative vote by Democratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who is recovering from an assassination attempt.
Mr. Obama had sought a "grand bargain" that would have included more than $4 trillion in deficit reduction and included both revenue increases, cuts to entitlement programs and tax reform. But against a backdrop of Republican opposition to any revenue increases and Democratic opposition to significant cuts to entitlements, closed-door negotiations over the larger deal broke down.
The bill will immediately increase the debt limit by roughly $400 billion immediately and then another $500 billion in the fall. It will also create a 12-person bipartisan congressional committee tasked with coming up with recommendations for $1.5 trillion in further deficit reductions by Thanksgiving. Those reductions could include cuts from defense spending and social safety net programs, as well as changes to the tax code.
If the recommendations are not created or approved by Congress by the end of the year, it will trigger more than $1 trillion in automatic spending cuts unless Congress sends a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution to the states.
A summary of the debt ceiling compromise
Boehner: Debt committee could recommend tax hikes
Deal sets up December showdown, despite talk otherwise
Mr. Obama called on that committee to take a "balanced approach" -- one that includes revenue increases -- with "everything on the table."
"Yes, that means making some adjustments to protect health care programs like Medicare so they're there for future generations. It also means reforming our tax code so that the wealthiest Americans and biggest corporations pay their fair share," he said. "And it means getting rid of taxpayer subsidies to oil and gas companies and tax loopholes that help billionaires pay a lower tax rate than teachers and nurses."
In a statement, House Speaker John Boehner called passage of the bill "a positive step forward that begins to rein in federal spending, but it's only a step."
"We should save the celebration for when a Balanced Budget Amendment is ratified, the deficit is fixed, and our economy has returned to creating jobs," he said.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said after the Senate vote that "Neither side got what they wanted."
"Each side laments some of the things we had to give up, but that's the way it is," he said.
From CBS Moneywatch.com
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Watch Bob Schieffer's analysis of Mr. Obama's remarks below:
What roles do government spending and government revenue have to play in reducing our deficit? On one hand you have money going out and on the other you have the money that the government is taking in, the continuing argument is about what should being paid out and where the incoming revenue should come from.
What constitutes a tax increase? Is the ending of a temporary reduction of taxes ('temporary' meaning it has an assigned expiration date) truly a tax increase or is it really just the end of a deferred tax rate? The similar situation is where consumers receive credit cards with an 'introductory' rate which expires after a period of time and then the interest rate increases to the normal rate.
Who should pay higher taxes? The corporations? People who inherit from their family members? People who save or invest? Anyone who makes more than????? Where does the government draw the line at reaching into the citizen's pockets and pulling out more cash? The popular notion is to keep the government out of our bedrooms, out of our bodies, out of a lot of areas of our life - but yet there is the desire to have the government reach deeper into wallets and bank accounts from those that some would deem 'able to afford it'.....who gets to make that call?
The August shortfall on "obligations" is $20 thousand million. Somebody better keep their hand on our collective wallet that is now in the President's ass pocket.
There won't be a dime left, of that 2.4 trillion, in spending limit, by the time he leaves office in 2013.
Obama's goal is to bankrupt this country, and he is very much succeeding.
I don't really have a problem with the sunsetting of the Obama tax cuts, but I don't think our current tax system will solve our problems. We need a new method of taxation. Sunsetting the tax cuts will do little to increase revenue since most of the "evil rich" are able to legally avoid taxes. You lefties are jealous of their wealth, not their income. They don't have wages; they have capital gains. This class warfare has to cease. And, why not have the "less fortunate" have some skin in the game? Eliminate income taxes, gas taxes, cigarette taxes, etc., and institute a federal sales tax, such as that promoted in the Fair Tax. Maybe if EVERYONE paid for the government, they wouldn't be so glib about spending. We have a spending problem. A study of the effects on shrimp of using a treadmill??? Seriously???
1) $14.4 TRILLION national debt, and even with this deal the federal government will continue to over spend
2) $300 BILLION each year just to pay the interest alone, is what the debt costs the American taxpayers. We haven't even begun to talk about paying down the debt.
3) The deficit spending is causing the devaluation of the US dollar
4) There is a strong chance that the devaluation of the US dollar may bring about hyper-inflation. This would hit the poor and those on fixed incomes (the elderly) the hardest.
5) If Congress really lives up to NOT raising taxes, there is a chance business will turn around. However, the biggest enemy of business success right now is the stupid health care law that is about to impose huge expenses on business. If this idiotic law was repealed, we would see the horrible 9% unemployment rate begin to drop.
The practice of over spending by Washington must come to a stop, and hopefully this deal will turn the nation in that direction. We have been traveling in the wrong direction for some time.
2)Thanks mortgage lenders, Goldman Sachs, AIG, Lehman Brothers, Moody's and S&P, and too many others to mention, for the 08 crash. That crash was exciting, fun and memorable. Now we get to entertain ourselves by experiencing extreme fear at the thought of a banking system so weak that Ben Bernanke has to keep the borrowing rate near zero so that the lenders won't go under, and so that the real estate market will be kept alive, barely--but alive
3) Thanks, Mr. Boehner, Mr. McConnell, and Mr. Bush, for debting, lowering taxes, and not worrying about it, because when you debt, well it's not the same as when others debt.
4) Thanks Republican party for keeping the pork on the table, that is to say, for keeping a bloated Defense Department budget off the list of WASTEFUL SPENDING TO BE CUT. When you waste money, well that's not the same as when others waste money.
5) Thanks tea party, for raising the founding fathers from the dead. Such an amazing event has not been witnessed for over two thousand years. And with the raising of our perfect founders, we, the people, now know that all of our problems are due to wasteful government spending (Democrats Only), lazy welfare recipients, greedy public employees (excluding Republican house and senate members) and finally, dumb union people.
Lest I forget, thanks, FDIC for taking over a record number of failed banks this year, even though you now don't have the money to do so, thanks anyway. Because, if you did not step in, we, the people, would know exactly what it felt like to be a free citizen of the USA during the late 1920s and early 1930s, who, upon walking to the bank to withdraw a bit of money for the week, discovered that the free market was working just fine: alas bankruptcy is a sad fact of capitalism. We, the people, don't need any social compacts whatsoever, we can manage just fine, each on his or her own. What is the value of trust, surely not as much as gold.
This add makes Obama seem like the great compromiser and deficit hawk, not the partisan liberal political hack he is that has sent the Independant voters against him in a staggering decline in his support.
With the country solely focused on the deficit and with the (2) stage process this bill requires, it will keep it in the focus till election day in 2012 and that is bad news for Obama.
The economy is getting worse and unemployment remains stagnant and will increase soon. The rate of growth restated in Q1 from 1.9% to .04% and Q2 at 1.3% for now until it is restated shows we are actually heading into the ditch of another recession.
With this econonmic performance, anyone running against this fool in the White House wins hands down. That is why the mantra form the liberal press from now on will be about "terrorist" extremist conservatives in the Tea Party etc. Etc.
It will not work. Obama will be judged on the results and they are very bad....