Reid To Boehner: If You Want $2 Trillion In Cuts, Start With Oil And Gas Tax Breaks
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
(Huffington Post) Less than a day after House
Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) demanded that the
debt ceiling not be lifted unless the
government reduce spending by $2 trillion,
Democrats are calling his bluff. Senate Democratic leadership
is asking Boehner to reaffirm support for
ending tax breaks to five of the top oil
companies as part of his quest to achieve
federal savings. “You can't talk about
cuts without first looking at eliminating the
giveaways to big oil. It should start there,”
Jon Summers, a top spokesman for Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), said in a
statement. “We agree we have to cut spending,
but it is ridiculous for Republicans to push a
plan to kill Medicare while trying to defend
taxpayer handouts to big oil companies that are
making record profits. They don't need the
money. If Republicans are serious about cutting
spending, they'll support our plan to eliminate
welfare for Big Oil so we can apply that money
toward the deficit.” Summer’s retort comes just
hours after Boehner upped the stakes over the
debt ceiling debate: He told a Wall Street
crowd that his caucus would not sign off on
raising the limit -- which stands at $14.3
trillion -- unless it was attached to strict
spending reductions. Tax increases, he added,
are off the table. “Without significant
spending cuts and changes in the way we spend
the American people’s money, there will be no
increase in the debt limit. And the cuts should
be greater than the accompanying increase in
the debt limit that the president is given,”
Boehner said in an
address to the Economic Club of New
York. The timeframe for the cuts would be
longer than the life of the debt limit
increase, meaning that it would be implemented
over the course of, likely, several
years. The natural response would
be to ask Boehner to actually pinpoint the cuts
that he wants. But Senate Democrats are
choosing a slightly different tact: proposing
their own deficit reduction measures and daring
Republicans to object. Repealing oil company tax
breaks is something that Boehner briefly said
he would considered supporting before
cautioning that he wouldn’t back a policy that
could hurt domestic suppliers. Democrats
responded by tailoring the proposal so that it
hit just the top five companies. Ending their
breaks could save the government $21 billion
over ten years.
