Mr. Obama’s calls reflect a sense of urgency within the White House to find a way to keep alive the prospects for a deal on revenues and entitlement spending — or, failing that, to at least appear to be doing so.
From The New York Times:
WASHINGTON — With Republican leaders in Congress
forswearing budget negotiations over new revenues, President
Obama has begun reaching around them to Republican lawmakers with a history
of willingness to cut bipartisan deals.
“Maybe because of sequestration and frustration with the public, the time is
right to act, and what I see from the president is probably the most encouraging
engagement on a big issue since the early days of his presidency,” said Senator
Lindsey
Graham, Republican of South Carolina, who received a call from Mr. Obama on
Tuesday.
Speaking of the deficit reduction impasse, Mr. Graham
added, “He wants to do the big deal.”
Mr. Obama’s call to Mr. Graham followed other
conversations with Senators Susan
Collins of Maine, Tom
Coburn of Oklahoma, Rob
Portman of Ohio and Bob Corker of Tennessee, all Republicans. Mr. Corker
called his conversation with the president “constructive.”
Mr. Portman, while reluctant to detail private talks,
was also positive, saying: “I think there’s a window of opportunity between now
and the end of the summer. This is the last best chance.”
Yet such expressions of hope are increasingly scarce
in Washington. While Mr. Graham said he and Mr. Obama agreed that a
comprehensive deal could be reached to both slow the growth of the entitlement
programs like Medicare
and raise revenues by curbing costly tax breaks, that optimism is not the
prevailing sentiment. Proponents in both parties have all but given up on a
grand bargain in view of the chasm between Mr. Obama, who insists that revenues
be part of the equation, and Republican leaders, who are just as adamant against
raising taxes further.
Indeed, Mr. Obama’s calls reflect a sense of urgency
within the White House to find a way to keep alive the prospects for a deal on
revenues and entitlement spending — or, failing that, to at least appear to be
doing so.
Administration officials take Speaker John A. Boehner
and the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, at their word that they will
not cut any revenue deals with Mr. Obama given the two men’s separate political
pressures — Mr. Boehner would lose his leadership post, Republicans say, and Mr.
McConnell could draw a conservative opponent in his re-election race next year.
With sequestration in place, the two sides now have
agreed over two years to nearly $4 trillion in deficit reduction through 2023,
with about 80 percent from spending cuts and the rest from higher taxes on the
wealthy. Virtually no savings come from Medicare, Medicaid
and Social
Security, the entitlement programs whose growth is driving projections of
unsustainable debt as the population ages and medical costs increase. And
revenues are insufficient to support the size of government.
As a consequence, the legacy-minded president is
forcing himself to do something he has largely avoided or left to senior
advisers — personally reaching out to rank-and-file members of Congress. The
call to Mr. Graham, for example, was partly in response to his televised comment
that he would be willing to raise $600 billion more in revenue over 10 years if
Democrats agreed to reduce entitlement spending — just the offer Mr. Obama has
been making.
Senior aides also opened a channel with Senator Roy
Blunt, Republican of Missouri and a member of his party’s leadership. Senate
aides familiar with the talks say Mr. Obama is telling senators that he wants to
convene bipartisan discussions at the White House, a departure from the more
typical meetings between him and party leaders.
“The president is engaging with lawmakers of both
parties and will continue to do so,” said the White House press secretary, Jay
Carney. Repeating a phrase the president first used recently, Mr. Carney said
the outreach was the president’s way of “finding the members of the caucus of
common sense and working with them to bring about a resolution to this
challenge.”
Dissatisfaction with Mr. Obama’s attentions to Capitol
Hill, however, has been longstanding and bipartisan. Democrats complain that the
president has done little to use the trappings of office to woo opponents or
reward friends. Republicans say they rarely hear even from the White House aides
tasked to reach out to Congress.
One senior Democratic Congressional aide said the
president seemed to view relations with lawmakers “as a chore, not an
opportunity.”
But another expressed sympathy with the White House
view that many Republicans see political risk in appearing too friendly with Mr.
Obama, adding: “If he invited people up and nothing came of it, then he looks
like a failure. He’s trying to find effective ways to reach out.”
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