U.S.
Representative John Boehner
A
Balanced Approach to Averting the Fiscal
Cliff
WASHINGTON,
D.C. – Today, Speaker John Boehner
(R-OH) released the following column discussing Congressional
Republicans’
support of a balanced approach to averting the fiscal cliff:
“Just
weeks away looms the ‘fiscal cliff,’ a
combination of automatic tax increases and spending cuts that everybody
in
Washington claims they want to avoid.
“Republicans
want to work with the president to
steer our economy clear of the fiscal cliff in a way that finally
begins to
solve the problem of our nation's debt.
“We
have a huge national debt because
Washington spends too much, not because it doesn’t tax people enough.
“During
the campaign, the president spoke of a
‘balanced’ approach to the fiscal cliff and our debt – a combination of
new tax
revenues and spending controls, used in tandem to reduce the deficit.
“When
the president says ‘new revenues,’ he
means raising tax rates. Republicans
are
opposed to that because it will hurt small businesses and destroy jobs.
“But
there's another way to get the president the
revenue he seeks. By
cutting spending
and closing special-interest loopholes in the tax code instead of
raising tax
rates, we can avert the fiscal cliff in a way that helps our economy
instead of
hurting it.
“Accordingly,
Republicans have signaled our
willingness to accept some new revenues, if they come from tax reform
instead
of higher tax rates and are accompanied by meaningful spending reforms
that
begin to address the drivers of our country’s debt.
“In
re-electing a Democratic president and a Republican
majority in the House, the American people gave both parties a mandate
– not to
raise tax rates, but to find common ground and act in the best
interests of our
country.
“I’ve
cited the 1986 tax reform agreement
between a Republican president, Ronald Reagan, and a Democratic Speaker
of the
House, Tip O’Neill, as one model of such a bipartisan accord. That agreement helped to
pave the way for the
strong economic growth America experienced in the years that followed.
“A
more recent model exists as well, in the
form of the proposal President Clinton’s former White House chief of
staff,
Erskine Bowles, presented last year to the bipartisan Joint Select
Committee on
Deficit Reduction (‘supercommittee’).
“The
proposal is basically this: both parties would
agree to a balanced deficit reduction package that includes significant
spending cuts as well as $800 billion in new revenues.
“To
avoid doing harm to the economy, the new
revenues would be achieved not through higher tax rates, but through
pro-growth
tax reform that closes special-interest loopholes and deductions and
lowers
rates.
“On
the spending side, the plan would cut $900
billion in mandatory spending and another $300 billion in discretionary
spending. These
would be cuts over and
above the spending reductions enacted via the 2011 Budget Control Act.
“This
plan is a middle ground that would enable
us to avert the fiscal cliff without doing harm to the nation’s economy.
“On
December 3, we sent this plan to the
president as our counteroffer to his own fiscal cliff plan.
“The
president's plan calls for a $1.6 trillion
tax hike -- double what he campaigned on -- as well as billions in new
‘stimulus’ spending and the authority to raise the nation's debt
ceiling to
infinity.
“The
huge revenue increase in the president's
plan would be achieved through higher tax rates on small businesses and
others. And where
are the spending cuts
the president promised?
“Republicans
won't be party to an agreement
that shields big businesses and preserves special-interest tax breaks
while
raising tax rates on small businesses and hurting our economy.
“Our
proposal instead offers a way for
Democrats to get the revenue they seek along with meaningful spending
reforms,
without tax rate hikes that will cost jobs.
“To
date, though, the president has refused to
consider our plan, while also refusing to offer a viable alternative.
“The
proposal put forth by House Republicans is
a reasonable framework. If
the president
won't accept it, he has a responsibility to offer a plan of his own
that can
pass both chambers of Congress.
“Slow-walking
our economy to the brink of the
fiscal cliff is not a strategy worthy of the White House. For the sake of our
country, the president
must lead.”
Boehner
represents Ohio’s 8th District, which
includes all of Darke, Miami, and Preble counties, most of Butler and
Mercer
counties, and the northeastern corner of Montgomery County. He was
first
elected to Congress in 1990.
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