Top Dems Question Tax Deduction Proposal
White House Plan To Drop Bush Tax Cuts On Wealthy, Use Funds For Health Care, Hits Democratic Opposition
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President Barack Obama arrives to deliver remarks at the Transportation Department in Washington, March 3, 2009. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
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Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., left, huddles with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 4, 2009, prior to Geithner prior to Geithner testifying before the committee's hearing on the fiscal 2010 federal budget. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
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Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus questioned Wednesday whether the proposal was viable, a day after his House counterpart also expressed reservations.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said tax increases on families making more than $250,000 a year are necessary to make a down payment on health care reform and to limit future budget deficits. But, he said, he was willing to work with lawmakers on proposals they objected to.
"We recognize there are other ways to do this," Geithner told the Finance Committee.
Baucus, a Montana Democrat, said he thought the administration would be flexible on the proposal. "They want health care reform as much as I do," he told reporters.
Geithner and White House budget director Peter Orszag returned to Capitol Hill on Wednesday for a second day of hearings on Obama's $3.6 trillion tax and spending proposal. Both faced tough questions about the tax package.
The White House has launched its battle to push the ambitious budget package through Congress during a week that has seen the economy's continuing erosion - particularly on the stock markets. Wall Street remained on edge with both the Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 index registering their lowest finishes in more than a decade.
Geithner and Orszag blame the Bush administration for creating a situation that makes the massive plan necessary, and stress that the new measures need time to work. (Read more on White House's defense of the budget.)
"It's way too soon to start judging success or failure here," White House Budget Director Peter Orszag said on CBS' The Early Show Wednesday. "We inherited a large mess."
Mr. Obama's budget calls for setting aside $634 billion over the next 10 years as a down payment on health care reform. Half the money would come from tax increases on upper-income earners; the other half from cuts to Medicare and Medicaid.
In an effort to keep the president's push for sweeping health care reforms moving forward, the White House was to host some 120 industry experts and lawmakers for a summit on the topic later Thursday.
The budget calls for two tax increases on couples making more than $250,000 and individuals making more than $200,000. Mr. Obama wants to increase the top tax rates from 35 percent to 39.6 percent by allowing a tax cut enacted under President George W. Bush to expire in 2011.
He also wants to limit the deductions those families can claim for charitable donations, mortgage interest and state and local taxes.
I would never want to adversely affect anything that is charitable or good.
Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y.The higher tax rates are a good bet to become law because Obama campaigned on the change and Congress would not have to do anything to enact them. Once the Bush tax cuts expire at the end of 2010, the higher rates would take effect.
But some key Democrats are wary of limiting deductions.
"I don't want to prejudge anything, but it is certainly one that I am having difficulties with," said Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J.
On Tuesday, Rep. Charles Rangel, chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said he, too, had reservations about the proposal.
"I would never want to adversely affect anything that is charitable or good," the New York Democrat said.
Republicans have been even more critical of the proposal, saying it would reduce charitable donations at a time when many charities are struggling.
"There are people with the means to help. Why would you make it harder for them to do it?" said Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, chairman of the Republican Policy Committee, who is from Michigan.
Geithner said the change would merely restore the same deduction limits that were in place when President Ronald Reagan left office.
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- I have a question. Now that they are taking less FICA out of our weekly pay, will we end up owing more at the end of the year, or will the tax table be adjusted?
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- **Any politician who took money form wall st. should be removed empty washington.
Posted by bumpedoff**
There would be no Politicans left !!
**All of our futures are at stake, only because of the Bush Cheney Administration's decision to lower the tax on the wealthy, and the greed, and big business have just took advantage, Posted by starleo146 **
Now remind me of whose Administration deregulated the Banking Industry?? Oh yeah, the Clinton Administration.
But we cannot put ALL the blame there. Former Sen. Phil Gramm (R) , nine years ago, as part of a decades-long anti-regulatory crusade, Gramm pulled a sly legislative maneuver that greased the way to the multibillion-dollar subprime meltdown. He is now reviled as the villain who bankrupted Middle America. Oh, but wasn't that during the Clinton Administration also?? - Reply to this comment
- **"Geithner and Orszag blame the Bush administration..."
People are already beginning to notice that Obama spends more time blaming Bush for his problems than he does fixing them.**
If Obama would concentrate more on all those "Promises" he made his voters, maybe he could accomplish something. He KNEW what the siutation of the ecomony was and had all the answers. Maybe he should sit down and watch his campaign speeches. - Reply to this comment
- **The budget calls for two tax increases on couples making more than $250,000 and individuals making more than $200,000.**
And just how many in this country make that much money?? Come on Obama, get realistic... - Reply to this comment
- The threat of nationalization is a self fulfilling prophecy. Supporters be careful what you wish for. Nationalization must immediately br followed within months by privitazation or the problem will be even worse. By slamming banks and making threats Obama has in fact exacerbated the problem. If he intended this result, and he did, then he should never have supported the $700 Billion bailout. If you're going to trash talk a bank, don't by the damned thing first.
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- The first domino is about to fall citi bank trading at $1.00 per share what will the
Fearless leader obama do when when citi bank go's worthles
Posted by bumpedoff at 11:48 AM : Mar 5, 2009
I hope he lets Citi roll under the waves and die. Depositors are insured, the management obvioiusly screwed the pooch by getting greedy and mismanaging their books, they don't deserve taxpayer assistance to reinforce their bad decisions. Free market economics at work, right? Sometimes businesses fail and others move into their place, a sort of corporate Darwinism at work. - Reply to this comment
- The first domino is about to fall citi bank trading at $1.00 per share what will the
Fearless leader obama do when when citi bank go's worthles - Reply to this comment
- The problems were NOT caused by tax cuts - that's ludicrous. The problems we face were caused by deregulation written by a Republican, voted on & passed by both Republicans & Democrats, and signed into law by a Democrat. ALL WERE INVOLVED and THAT'S HISTORY. You'd better worry about what is happening NOW. Obama proposed and supported and voted for a $150 Billion stimulus last year that did nothing - money sent to China via WalMart. The $750 Billion bailout put togehther by Reid & Polosi and supported by Obama was money wasted - it accomplished NOTHING. The Trillion dollar 'stimulus' just passed without ever being read is obese with pork and Obama just signed a 3.4 Trillion dollar package with 8000 earmarks - more pork. Our treasury is being raided while Americans sing praises to someone who is obviously in over his head. Billions given away to keep people in homes the never actually qualified for in the first place, nationalizing banks, auto companies and health care while rewarding deadbeats and penalizing successful families. Stop pointing fingers and start asking questions.
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- "Geithner and Orszag blame the Bush administration..."
People are already beginning to notice that Obama spends more time blaming Bush for his problems than he does fixing them.
It wasn't as though he knew the economy was bad or anything. It wasn't as if he didn't beg for the job. /snark
We have elected an incompetent. - Reply to this comment
- there are some bad greedy democrats as well but we will weed them out and all republicans after all this is over.
Posted by starleo146
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Hahahahahaha!
Political hack. - Reply to this comment

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