Tax Brawl Brewing on Capitol Hill - East Idaho News
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Tax Brawl Brewing on Capitol Hill

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GETTY P 101111 CapitolBuilding?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1338539229188iStockPhoto/Thinkstock(WASHINGTON) — The reality of “Taxmageddon” — a heavy load of tax code provisions expiring at the end of the year — is that lawmakers probably won’t come together on a comprehensive agreement until after the election this fall.

But that has not stopped congressional leaders from posturing on their party’s policies, hoping to drum up support for their respective platforms before November.

Republicans and Democrats alike often publicize the need to create certainty for the country’s small businessmen and women by removing uncertainty from the fiscal horizon.

But if anything on Capitol Hill is certain these days, it’s that the divided Congress is unlikely to bridge its differences before the election this November, and depending on the strength of a mandate that voters award to Congress on Election Day, the issue is likely to drag on well into next year.

Looking to get ahead of the game, House Speaker John Boehner said on Thursday that the House will act to “extend all of the current tax rates” next month “bringing some certainty to the tax code.”

Across the aisle, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi wrote Boehner last week asking him to bring a middle-income tax cut bill to the floor immediately, leaving the battle over the upper-income tax cuts for another day.  The Democratic leader said on Thursday that she believes it is “important for us to get the show on the road, to act now so that we can remove all doubt that there will be a middle-income tax cut.”

“No longer will middle-income taxpayers be held hostage to those making over a million dollars a year and that money raised by the expiration of the high-income tax cuts would be used to reduce the deficit,” Pelosi, D-Calif., said.  “This is urgent because, as we go toward the months ahead, we have another conversation brewing about the debt ceiling and it’s important for us to show that revenue will be on the table as we reduce the deficit.  We have to deal with our economic issues, and we have to do it now.”

Whatever the House Republican majority passes next month, President Obama and congressional Democrats are unlikely to wholly embrace the GOP’s approach to extend all the current tax rates.  Democrats have their own preferences, especially allowing the tax rates to expire for the wealthiest earners making more than $1 million per year and using that new revenue to pay down the deficit.

Asked about the prospect of a short-term extension of the current tax rates in order to get lawmakers past the lame duck and into the next session of Congress, Pelosi said that the idea of a three- or six-month extension is “fairly stupid” and another example of Congress “kicking that old can down the road.”

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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