Political Hotsheet
By

Stephanie Condon /

CBS News/ December 21, 2011, 11:39 AM

House GOP takes a political beating in payroll tax fight

Speaker of the House Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, speaks to the media before a meeting with the conference committee on the payroll tax cut on Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2011 in Washington. From left, House Majority Leader Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va., Boehner, Rep. Renee Ellmers, R-N.C., and Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich.

Speaker of the House Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, speaks to the media before a meeting with the conference committee on the payroll tax cut on Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2011 in Washington. From left, House Majority Leader Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va., Boehner, Rep. Renee Ellmers, R-N.C., and Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich. / AP Photo/Evan Vucci

Speaker of the House Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, speaks to the media before a meeting with the conference committee on the payroll tax cut on Dec. 21, 2011 in Washington. From left, House Majority Leader Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va., Boehner, Rep. Renee Ellmers, R-N.C., and Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich.

/ AP Photo/Evan Vucci

Updated at 12:15 p.m. ET

Republicans and Democrats in Congress are deadlocked over a bill to extend the payroll tax cut, with just about 10 days to stop a tax increase for 160 million Americans.

House Republicans have so far refused to accept a compromise with Senate Democrats and President Obama -- but while they may be holding out for a legislative victory, they are already losing the fight politically.

The fight over the payroll tax cut extension took a surprising turn this week when the GOP-led House refused to accept a Senate-passed version of the bill, which passed with 89 votes and the support of all but seven Republicans.

Now, lawmakers in the Republican party are questioning their leaders' decisions and prominent conservative opinion-makers like the Wall Street Journal editorial board are skewering the GOP for botching the payroll tax cut debate. The Journal's editorial board wrote that, "Given how [Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell] and House Speaker John Boehner have handled the payroll tax debate, we wonder if they might end up re-electing the president before the 2012 campaign even begins in earnest."

Democrats appear to have the same idea, seizing the opportunity to attack the Republican party for raising taxes.

Both Democrats and some Republicans want to extend the tax cut, but the parties are divided over how to pay for it, as well as unrelated measures that have been included in the debate, such as a provision relating to a transcontinental oil pipeline.

The Senate has passed a two-month extension of the tax cut -- a temporary measure designed to give Congress more time to negotiate the sticking points. Instead of voting on the Senate bill, the House voted in favor of forming a "conference committee" -- a small group of lawmakers from both the Senate and the House that would work out the two chambers' differences.

In remarks to reporters Wednesday morning, Boehner explained the House GOP position this way: "Let's extend the payroll tax credit for a year. And all we're asking for is to get the Senate members over here to work with us to resolve our differences so we can do what everybody wants to do, extend the payroll tax credit for the next year."

Obama calls Boehner to push for payroll tax cut extension

By skirting a direct vote on the Senate bill, GOP leaders avoided putting their members in a tough spot -- either voting against a popular payroll tax cut or relenting to the Senate. But while the House GOP may have technically avoided the tough vote, the motion that passed Tuesday still looks like a vote against the tax cut.

As the Journal editorial board writes, "The GOP leaders have somehow managed the remarkable feat of being blamed for opposing a one-year extension of a tax holiday that they are surely going to pass. This is no easy double play."

If they payroll tax cut is not extended by the end of the year, 160 million Americans would see their payroll tax increase from 4.2 percent to 6.2 percent. Failure to act would also result in cuts to Medicare doctors' fees and a lapse in jobless benefits.

So far, Democrats are not giving in to Boehner's demands for a conference committee. House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid say they won't send any of their members to a conference and insist that House Republicans should just pass the two-month extension. Reid on Wednesday released a letter to Boehner, urging him to bring the House back to Washington and finish the job.

House Republicans have been critical of Boehner and McConnell for not acting from the same playbook. Senate Republicans say that Boehner should back the two-month extension, which McConnell negotiated with the Democrats.

Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., said "now is not the time for drawing lines in the sand," while Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said the ongoing fight is "harming the Republican party" and "harming the view, if it's possible anymore, of the American people about Congress."

Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., said there was "no reason" for House Republicans to keep up their fight, adding that "what is playing out in Washington, D.C. this week is about political leverage, not about what's good for the American people."

Some House Republicans complained that it should have been clear to McConnell that House Republicans wouldn't accept a two-month extension.

"People didn't quite understand how, when the speaker left the meeting with Sen. McConnell and Sen. Reid, this abomination was what was sent back to us," Rep. Steven LaTourette, R-Ohio, a Boehner ally, told Roll Call.

It's unusual for Republican lawmakers to break ranks with their leaders, so the current dissension indicates that GOP members are well aware of the political risk of letting the payroll tax increase in 2012.

Democrats are exploiting the fact that the House GOP's most conservative members have compelled Republicans to take that risk. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is circulating a petition that reads, "The Tea Party is mugging the middle class with a tax increase because they don't think millionaires and corporations should pay their fair share."

The issue is also coming up in specific 2012 races: The Hill reports that Democrats in North Dakota sent out a news release blasting GOP Rep. Rick Berg, a 2012 Senate candidate, for being "more interested in playing hyper-partisan games than standing up for middle-class North Dakota families."

The White House, meanwhile, released an email highlighting the fact that, if the tax cut isn't extended, the typical family making $50,000 a year will lose about $40 from each paycheck. The email asked, "What Does $40 Mean to You?" and the White House says it has received about 10,000 responses on WhiteHouse.gov.

"Opponents of the payroll tax cut dismiss its impact by insisting $40 isn't a lot of money, but that's not the case for many families who are already working hard to make ends meet," the White House email said. "Forty dollars buys a tank of gas or a fridge and pantry full of groceries. It covers a water bill or the cost of a prescription."

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
509 Comments Add a Comment
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BlameRepublicanz says:
HAHAHA its so amusing to watch what Republicans have done to themselves over the past week...they were so pre-occupied with obsctructing the President at all costs that they FORGOT their core ideology was tax breaks! LOL! They don't even know what they stand for anymore

They were against the payroll tax cut weeks ago but they read the polls and changed their mind...then they turned down a 2-3 year deal, then they supposedly agreed to a one year deal but attached a whole bunch of unrelated provisions to it (Keystone chinese oil giveaway)...then they were negotiated down to a 2 month temporary deal and Boehner accepted...then the tea party yanked his chain and he went back on it...then the GOP senate yanked his OTHER chain and he finally caved.

...its so fun watching the conservatives on here contorting themselves into a pretzel trying to make it seem as if DEMOCRATS were the ones holding up this deal up.

if you are against the payroll tax cut, fine...just say it...I would have respected House Republicans if they just admitted this from the jump...but they tried SO HARD to obstruct at all costs and try to make it seem as if the American public wouldnt notice while they pin the blame on everyone else...it backfired.
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BlameRepublicanz says:
hey conservatives...who was right? The 39 Republican senators who voted yes??...or the Tealiban House memebers that refused to vote on it??? Pick a side, because they aren't in agreement.
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occupy_cbs says:
Too funny.......speaker boner caves and announces deal was made!
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smehl1506 says:
It never fails. Whenever right-wing ideologues like the Tea Baggers win control, they always try to overreach. And sooner or later, it comes back to bite them in the butt. This is a perfect example.
And the same thing will happen in 2012, when the Baggers extremism results in President Obama's reelection.
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occupy_cbs says:
jfb100: "The clear message from the Republicans is that they are rabid for 'tax cuts' only if they are 'tax cuts' for billionaires. *Any* help for the middle class is immediately propagandized as socialism."

"The Republican party has eliminated all reason and civility from their platform and replaced it with fear, cruelty and propaganda."




On this terrible course as they have set sail, I have absolutely no respect or want to be civil at all, to this neoliberal republican party worshiping at the feet of corporate America and the top 1%, at the expense of the continuously evaporating middle class!
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occupy_cbs says:
DoJo724: "First off, salad-tosser....your constant use of the teabagger phrase from three years ago clearly marks you as an idiot."



Sorry, I have no use of any of the racist and bigoted teabaggers that have hijacked the House for the past year, making Congress completely dysfunctional, and passing nothing but far-right legislation that has no hope of ever becoming law.

Check it out.....this 112th Congress, where ideology trumps accomplishment, has done NOTHING, and actually has passed less legislation into law than even the 80th, "do nothing congress."

=====

Ideology Trumps Accomplishment as 112th Congress Pursues Futile Bills

"Call it grand standing, posturing, or GOPeacocking -- in the 112th Congress it's the new normal."

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/07/ideology-trumps-accomplishment-as-112th-congress-pursues-futile-bills/242313/

=====

BTW, I got your salad tossed already, and can shove it right down your throat any time, with a nice creamy hemlock dressing!
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occupy_cbs replies:
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Personally, I believe that all far-right, teabagging extremists are the morons and total idiots destroying our country, and the proof of that is the GOP House being held hostage by those same teabagging extremists!
smowback replies:
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You can always tell by a persons long winded response tat they just got...TEABAGGED!
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occupy_cbs says:
pr_boxer:
"Boehner's done, Cantor has engineered his collapse. There'll be a new Speaker by February! Boehner will go away to alcohol rehab."



You're probably correct, since the conservative WSJ, karl rove and now even mitch mcconnell are all jumping on speaker boner's back, and trying to get him to jettison the teabagging extremist highly-partisan legislation that they passed in the GOP House for just the far-right!


Boehner sticks to his guns as Senate Republican leader McConnell urges swift action

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57347091-503544/boehner-sticks-to-his-guns-as-senate-republican-leader-mcconnell-urges-swift-action/?tag=cbsContent;cbsCarousel

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This is tearing the republican party to shreds!
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smowback replies:
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Boner looked like he had donkey on his behind tearing him up! LOL!
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vanlinez says:
It's not even Democrats vs. Republicans anymore. It is Tea Party vs. The World. A majority of Americans agree that we need to raise revenue. Ending the Bush tax cuts for the rich is a good way to do it. Of course, a majority of Americans wanted a single payer healthcare system. Has it occurred to the GOP that they do not want to keep this argument going through the election cycle? The majority of Americans are getting tired of being ignored. And there is an election in November.
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phatandphoolish says:
scrum
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smehl1506 replies:
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Scrum? Or scum?
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starving1968-3 says:
by lrb1414 December 22, 2011 9:57 AM EST

Only in loopey la la liberal land can a liberal actually position themselves as a tax cutter against a conservative.







Right.

And the effects of those "tax cuts" on the exploding national debt is inconsequential to you too, right?
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