ROBINSON: Boehner’s weak hand in ‘fiscal cliff’ talks
Published: Monday, December 3, 2012 at 7:00 p.m.
Last Modified: Monday, December 3, 2012 at 4:16 p.m.
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SIGNE WILKINSON / Philadelphia Daily NewsRepublicans are having conniptions. Witness the way House Speaker John Boehner reacted when Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner presented the administration's proposals on taxes and spending:
Hmmm. Where do you imagine the president might have learned this particular bargaining technique? Might his instructors have been Boehner's own House Republicans, who went so far as to hold the debt ceiling for ransom — and with it, the nation's full faith and credit — in order to get their way?
In Boehner's view, he has already made a major concession: He announced that Republicans are
Obama insists that a modest increase in tax rates for the wealthiest households — from 35 percent to 39.6 percent, the rate during the Clinton years — must be part of any package.
This fight isn't about whether the rich will pay more in taxes; it is clear that they will. It's about whether this new revenue is collected in a way that allows House Republicans to say they have kept their pledge never to raise marginal tax rates for anyone, for any purpose.
Refusing to budge has served House Republicans well in previous budget negotiations. But the no-taxes-ever bulwark has not served the country well, and if Obama sees a way to blast through it, he would be remiss not to try.
Geithner seems confident.
There is no guarantee that Obama will get everything he wants out of this showdown. But I'd rather be playing the president's hand than Boehner's.
Most House Republicans are in safe districts, but not all of them — and the GOP majority will be smaller when the new Congress convenes. Polls indicate that most Americans believe the tax increase Obama seeks for the wealthy is no big deal. It's hard to imagine how Republicans can possibly get a better offer on taxes and spending in January than they can get now.
Hence Boehner's urgency. Time is not on his side.
Eugene Robinson is a columnist for the Washington Post.
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