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Bonner Says President Obama Using Fiscal Cliff for a Raw Power Grab

By Brandon Moseley
Alabama Political Reporter

U.S. Representative Jo Bonner (R) from Mobile said that “House Republicans support keeping the current tax rates in place to protect fragile small business job growth”

Rep. Bonner said, “The president is really at odds with himself, not Capitol Hill. For a month now Americans have been told by their president that the only thing standing in the way of our nation’s financial solvency is Congress. More specifically, the Republican House of Representatives has stubbornly refused to green light Mr. Obama’s plan to make the wealthy pay “their fair share”. At issue is President Obama’s insistence that raising the tax rate for those earning over $250,000 is the only way to raise enough money to avoid the country going over the fiscal cliff in January.”

Rep. Bonner said, “While House Republicans support keeping the current tax rates in place to protect fragile small business job growth (many small businesses file their taxes as individual earners,) Speaker John Boehner counter-offered to work with the president to close tax loopholes and reform the tax code instead. The White House balked at the House offer, blaming the arithmetic. In dismissing the idea, President Obama said, “Unfortunately, the Speaker’s proposal right now is out of balance. You know, he talks, for example, about $800 billion worth of revenues, but he says he’s going to do that by lowering rates. And when you look at the math, it doesn’t work.”

Rep. Bonner quoted the New York Times, “When Mr. Obama was engaged in ultimately unsuccessful negotiations with Mr. Boehner on a debt-reduction deal in the summer of 2011, he recounted his pitch to Republicans for reporters: ‘What we said was, give us $1.2 trillion in additional revenues, which could be accomplished without hiking taxes – tax rates – but could simply be accomplished by eliminating some deductions and engaging in a tax reform process that could have lowered rates generally while broadening the base.’” Bonner said that Republicans have offered to raise taxes on higher incomes by $800 billion, not by raising tax rates but by eliminating some deductions and loopholes. The President however is demanding higher tax rates.

Rep. Bonner asked, “So what is really driving the president’s stand-off with the House? It appears to be a raw power grab. Even if you take seriously the president’s latest demand that tax rates must go up for those earning over $250,000, his numbers don’t add up. The amount of money raised would total roughly $85 billion per year – not enough to run the government for more than a couple of weeks. What the president is really after is the ability to spend at will without the consent of Congress. In addition to demanding a tax increase, the president also told Congress he wants more stimulus spending and essentially automatic increases in the federal debt limit to allow future increases in borrowing authority without Congressional approval. Worse, the president and his colleagues in the Senate have flatly rejected any House effort to address the true drivers of our debt – mandatory spending programs.”

Rep. Bonner said, “On November 6, Mr. Obama was reelected president, not monarch. Under the constitution, he has to work with Congress. The American people gave no one party or branch of government a mandate to rule over the other. We must work together. Rather than renewing the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts for all Americans, President Obama continues to insist on holding tax relief hostage while pressing for more political leverage. If the president is truly interested in finding a solution that will restore confidence in our economy and promote job growth without naked power grabs, Congressional Republicans are ready to sit down and talk.”

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The U.S. Government owes $16,381 billion. The U.S. only owed $10,627 billion when President Obama was inaugurated. Government spending has risen much faster than federal revenues and the government has grown much faster than the overall economy. The federal debt is $1,100 billion a year. The total income tax collected is just $1,130 billion. The federal government needs to double the total income tax collected to balance the budget and that doesn’t pay down the debt.

If the Congress is unable to satisfy President Obama’s demands then the income taxes and FICA taxes most of us pay will automatically increase on January 1. Meanwhile automatic sequestration cuts will downsize our military and cut Medicare and other government programs.

Congressman Jo Bonner represents Alabama’s First Congressional District.

Brandon Moseley is a former reporter at the Alabama Political Reporter.

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