House Approves 'Permanent' Tax Cuts
But Measure Faces Democratic Opposition In Senate
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(AP)
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The measure passed on a largely party-line vote of 229-198.
The vote won't have much practical effect since Senate Democrats say they will never go along, reports CBS News Correspondent Bob Fuss. And in any case, a new president and new Congresses will be making the decisions when the tax cuts are set to expire at the end of 2010.
But Thursday's vote could have political results. Republicans will tell voters they were for keeping taxes lower, while Democrats will say they held off a raid on social security money.
House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., called it "the definitive vote in this Congress on the future stability and security of Social Security."
Republicans were just as eager to portray Democrats as advocates of higher taxes if the tax cuts expire as scheduled at the end of 2010.
"If you're looking for a fundamental debate between the parties, I think you've seen it," said Rep. Bill Thomas, R-Calif., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
Democrats contend the president's 10-year, $1.35 trillion tax cut is largely to blame for draining much of the government's budget surplus, meaning that the $374 billion cost of extending the package through 2012 would be financed by Social Security where a surplus still exists.
Although the Social Security money would have to be repaid when needed to pay benefits and the transfer would have no impact on the level of retiree benefits, the program remains a potent political weapon - particularly among older voters.
"They are spending Social Security money," said Gephardt, D-Mo. "I'm happy to have this debate. We'll hold their feet to the fire on how they've dealt with Social Security."
Led by the president, Republicans claim Democrats are advocating a massive tax increase that would drag down the economy if the package of cuts is allowed to expire on Dec. 31, 2010, as it will under current law. That would bring back pre-2001 income tax rates, resurrect the estate tax, cut the child tax credit in half and reduce or eliminate a number of other tax benefits.
"Democrats might want this automatic tax increase, but I think that is irresponsible," said House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill. "This automatic tax increase will play havoc with the lives of the American people."
Democrats also contend that in the decade after 2012, the cost of the tax cuts will balloon to at least $4 trillion counting interest and assuming certain necessary tax changes. Republicans say the tax cuts will ensure a robust economy that will generate plenty of revenue for the government.
The tax cuts will expire because of an obscure Senate budget rule, named for veteran Democratic Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, effectively forbidding any legislation that would worsen the deficit, or reduce the surplus, that is projected beyond the budget's 10-year window.
Conveniently for sponsors, this rule kept the cost of the bill at the $1.35 trillion figure required by last year's budget and ensured the tax cut needed only a majority of 51 votes instead of 60 to pass the Senate.
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress on Wednesday that most businesses are making investment decisions on the assumption that the tax cuts will be extended at some point. Yet Greenspan, too, said it would be better for the economy if the situation were clarified, particularly in such areas as the estate tax - which would be repealed in 2010 only to resurface in 2011.
"I think it has to be clear where the longer-term tax structure in this area is," Greenspan told the Joint Economic Committee. "Wherever the Congress comes out, I think it's far more important that it come out clearly and unequivocally, and not have an issue pending ... an issue which would create a degree of uncertainty."
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