CBS/AP/ July 27, 2009, 1:17 PM

Obama And Senate GOP Bicker Over Stimulus

Along the Normandy coast in Saint-Marie du Mont France, people gathered to unveil a statue to Maj. Dick Winters on the 68th anniversary of D-Day.

Along the Normandy coast in Saint-Marie du Mont France, people gathered to unveil a statue to Maj. Dick Winters on the 68th anniversary of D-Day. / CBS

President Barack Obama and Senate Republicans bickered Saturday over his economic recovery plan after states and schools lost billions of dollars in a late-night bargain to save it.

The $827 billion measure is likely to pass next week despite stiff opposition from the GOP and disappointment among Democrats, including the new president who labeled it imperfect.

Mr. Obama used his weekly radio and Internet address to stress the need to pass the bill, saying it will jump-start the struggling economy and put people back to work.

"We can't afford to make perfect the enemy of the absolutely necessary," Mr. Obama said, sounding a note of pragmatism that liberal followers rarely heard on the campaign trail.

In the Republic response, Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele said lots of money in the stimulus package is going to the wrong place.

The popular president - six in 10 voters approve of his performance so far - scolded Republicans with a pointed reminder that Democrats, not Republicans, were victorious in November.

The compromise forged between GOP moderates and the White House came late Friday, reports CBS News correspondent Kimberly Dozier, after a core group of seventeen Democrats and Republicans went through the bill line-by-line, crossing stuff out.

Hours later, the Senate convened a rare Saturday session to debate the compromise, a rare burst of comity aimed at securing passage of the bill with a few Republican votes joining the Democratic majority.

The compromise stripped $108 billion in spending from Mr. Obama's plan, including some destined for projects that likely would give the economy a quick lift. Yet it retained items that probably won't help the economy much at all.

Among the most controversial cuts was the elimination of $40 billion in aid to states, money that economists say is a relatively efficient way to pump up the economy by preventing layoffs, cuts in services or tax increases.

Negotiators left in the package $70 billion to address the alternative minimum tax to make sure families wouldn't be socked with unexpected tax increases averaging $2,300 or so. The problem was going to be fixed later in the year anyway, and congressional economists say fixing the AMT problem helps the economy by surprising little.

While publicly supportive of the bill, White House officials and top Democrats said they were disappointed that so much money was cut, including almost $20 billion for construction and repair of schools and university facilities. Those funds would have supported many construction jobs.

The $827 billion package debated in the Senate on Saturday included the president's signature tax cut of up to $1,000 for working couples. Also included is a tax credit of up to $15,000 for homebuyers and smaller breaks for people buying new cars. Much of the new spending would be for victims of the recession, in the form of unemployment compensation, health care and food stamps.

Mr. Obama himself acknowledged that the bill was far from perfect but said it would be too dangerous to leave it lifeless on the table. He and his advisers have grown more assertive in recent days, reminding Democrats that voters gave them the White House, the House and the Senate to bring change, not partisan gamesmanship.

"In the midst of our greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression, the American people were hoping that Congress would begin to confront the great challenges we face," Mr. Obama said in the address, released before he made his first trip to Camp David, the presidential retreat in the Maryland mountains.

"That was, after all, what last November's election was all about," he said.

Republicans characterized Mr. Obama's rhetoric as arrogant.

"Democrats have controlled both branches of government for less than a month. And you have to wonder if all that power has gone to their heads," Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele said in the GOP's weekly address. "For the last two weeks, they've been trying to force a massive spending bill through Congress under the guise of economic relief."

Mr. Obama made an aggressive push for House and Senate lawmakers to work quickly to resolve their differences. The White House plans a major public relations blitz: A prime-time news conference Monday, several trips outside Washington next week and an address to a joint session of Congress later this month.

He had hoped to sign economic legislation on his first day in office, but instead he has spent his first three weeks in office wrangling with a reluctant Congress, including fellow Democrats.

After weeks of losing a public-relations fight with Republicans, Mr. Obama's aides considered any forward movement of his legislation a victory toward fixing the economic crisis that has left 3.6 million Americans without jobs.

Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona, the Republican's No. 2 in the Senate, criticized Mr. Obama as misrepresenting Republicans' concerns and accused the president of using "dangerous words" in describing the emergency.

"This is still a very big spending bill," Kyl said on the Senate floor as an afternoon session got under way. "You can't fix it by simply shaving a little bit off."

The Senate headed toward a vote early in the week. If, as expected, the bill passes lawmakers will need to resolve the differences between the Senate and House bills before sending a final package to the president.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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viva_la_pace says:
repo_man_08, I am amazed at your ignorance. You say that the prices of gasoline that are increasing at a minimal rate are Obama's fault. You know as well as I do that he has been in office for a mere 3 months. It is impossible to decrease the cost of gasoline in that short span of time. He is not a superhuman. Besides, the oil supply in the world is rapidly decreasing and the demand is increasing even faster than the supply decreases. You should know the basic law of supply and demand. If anyone is to blame, it is humanity for its ignorance and procrastination to find alternative energy sources.
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repo_man_08 says:
AND BANKING DEREGULATION INCLUDING THE REPEAL OF GLAS-STEAGAL

I knew I was leaving something out
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repo_man_08 says:
Believe it or not, some lieberals are claiming to be so uninformed that they HADN''T HEARD that MADOFF WAS TURNED IN TO THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION IN 2000!!!!

CLINTON DID NOTHING ABOUT MADOFF!!

Madoff was just MORE of Clinton''s mess that he left for the next president.

MADOFF ENRON WORLDCOMM ANDERSEN ACCOUNTING

9/11 PILOTS TAKING FLYING LESSONS HERE, ONE GOT TURNED IN FIVE TIMES

RAMPANT ACCOUNTING FRAUD BECAME "NORMAL AND ACCEPTED PRACTICE"

ALL ON CLINTON''S WATCH

AND CLINTON DID NOTHING

CLINTON JUST LEFT IT FOR THE NEXT GUY

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repo_man_08 says:
THE PRICE OF GASOLINE IS STILL GOING UP!!!

IT IS ON OBAMA''S WATCH

OBAMA IS TO BLAME!!
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repo_man_08 says:
32 Senate Republicans voted against children''''s health care. It''''s not going to be too difficult to expose their pattern of obstruction.
Posted by TexannaHole at 10:26 AM : Feb 09, 2009

Stop whining and VOTE!!!!

You got the majority you wanted. WHY ARE YOU AFRAID TO USE IT????

If the children don''t get healthcare, THE DEMOCRATS ARE TO BLAME

THEY HAVE THE POWER, THEY HAVE THE GLORY

LET''S SEE THEM WORK THEIR MIRACLE
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antoniof123 says:
Well, leave it to the GOP to want to cut education for children.

Hey you know as I recall they made certain that the health care during the Republican rule of destruction got vetoed. Remmber they could spend $10 billion a month on war but could not find the money to spend $35 billion in 10 years for kids.

Compasionate conservative can yu see why you were swept from the halls of congress and the President. If not then forget it you are dumber than dirt.
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jsd330 says:
independentl

So you want to make your money here and then run overseas after you made your money here. Just like big businees make money here and run offshore to avoid paying taxes. And you call yourself an American, BS. It''s people like you that are part of the cause of this financial mess.
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raflin0010 says:
The difference between a Democrat and a Republican:

Democrat: "Yes we can."
Republican: "No we can''t."
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noloyalisti says:
The Friedmans and Norquists, Reagans and Bushes of the country have ruined us with their maniacal economic ideology. I don''t see anyway to go back, the whole thing needs to crash and hopefully we will do better the next time.
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CNH says:
True to form, the GOP continues to regard any spending as "pork" that does not directly end up in the pockets of corporate America or the ultra-wealthy.

Tax breaks do NOT result in more jobs. Total myth perpetuated by the GOP for the past 30 years.

Leading economists (both liberal and conservative) agree that tax breaks will do little to stimulate the economy, but federal spending on infrastructural projects, assistance for the unemployed and those facing foreclosure, and funding for vocational training and other forms of education will have the biggest positive impact.

We need to remember that, from the perspective of the Republicans in Congress, if Obama is unsuccessful with his efforts at rejuvenating the economy, it is a positive outcome with respect to their prospects during the next election cycle.

It is a matter of self-preservation; they simply do not have the interests of the American public at heart.
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