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Stimulus Deal Reached: $789 Billion

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DAVID ESPO   02/11/09 09:54 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Moving with lightning speed, the Democratic-controlled Congress and White House agreed Wednesday on a compromise $790 billion economic stimulus bill designed to create millions of jobs in a nation reeling from recession. President Barack Obama could sign the measure within days.

"More than one-third of this bill is dedicated to providing tax relief for middle-class families, cutting taxes for 95 percent of American workers," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid at a Capitol news conference where he was joined by moderates from both parties whose support is essential for the legislation's final passage.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Reid's partner in negotiations over more than 24 intense hours, initially withheld her approval in a lingering disagreement over federal funding for school construction. "We had to make sure the investment in education" was in the bill, she said.

Obama, who has campaigned energetically for the legislation, welcomed the agreement in a written statement that said it would "save or create more than 3.5 million jobs and get our economy back on track."

The emerging legislation is at the core of Obama's economic recovery program.

The president's signature tax cut was preserved _ a break for millions of lower- and middle-income taxpayers of $400 per individual and $800 per couple. That's less than the $500 and $1,000 the White House originally sought, although officials said it would mean an estimated $13 per week extra per paycheck.

Wage-earners who don't earn enough to pay income taxes would get a reduction in the Social Security and Medicare taxes they pay.

The bill also includes help for victims of the recession in the form of expanded unemployment benefits, food stamps, health coverage and more, as well as billions for states that face the prospect of making deep cuts in school aid and other programs.

Another provision will mean a one-time payment of $250 for millions of beneficiaries who receive Social Security, Supplemental Security Income and veterans pensions and disability, according to officials. They added that the measure will include $46 billion for transportation projects such as highway, bridge and mass transit construction.

The president also won money for two other administration priorities _ information technology in health care, and "green jobs" to make buildings more energy-efficient and reduce the nation's reliance on foreign oil.

The bill "will be the beginning of the turnaround for the American economy," predicted Sen. Joe Lieberman, the independent from Connecticut.

Republicans couldn't have disagreed more.

"It appears that Democrats have made a bad bill worse by reducing the tax relief for working families in order to pay for more wasteful government spending," said Rep. John Boehner of Ohio.

But some prominent Republicans straddled the issue.

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, last year's Republican running mate and a potential White House contender in 2012, said her state was ready to accept a projected $1 billion in federal funds if they make sense for the state. But she criticized increased spending on social programs, which she said could wind up costing her state in the long run and "don't necessarily stimulate the economy."

The events capped a frenzied 24-plus hours that began at midday Tuesday when the Senate approved its original version of the bill on a party-line vote of 61-37. Reid, Pelosi and White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel plunged into a series of meetings designed to produce agreement in time for Obama to sign the bill by mid-month.

Pelosi was conspicuously absent from Wednesday's news conference in which members of the Senate announced the agreement. Moments later, Reid arrived in her office, and the two talked by phone with Emanuel, according to officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Officials had said previously that one of the final issues to be settled was money for school modernization, a priority for Pelosi as well as Obama and one on which they differed with Collins and other moderates whose votes will be essential for final Senate approval.

Originally, Pelosi and House Democrats wanted a new program dedicated to school construction, but Collins held firm against that. In the end, officials said the agreement added flexibility to a $54 billion State Stabilization Fund, to permit local governments to use some of the money for modernizing school buildings but not building new ones.

There also was an unspecified last-minute change in a House proposal that would allow state legislatures to order the use of funds over the opposition of governors. Officials said that issue related in part to South Carolina, where GOP Gov. Mark Sanford has been a vehement critic of the legislation.

The officials who described the developments and elements of the bill did so on condition of anonymity, saying they were not authorized to speak.

Stocks moved higher in the moments after Reid stepped to the microphone just outside the Senate chamber. The Dow Jones industrials, which plunged 382 points on Tuesday, rose 51 points for the day.

Obama has been contending daily that the plan is essential to avoid turning what is already the worst economic crisis in a generation into a catastrophe.

As if to underscore the urgency, he said a few hours before the agreement was announced that machinery giant Caterpillar Inc. plans to rescind some of the 22,000 layoffs the firm recently announced _ once the stimulus is signed into law.

Scaling back the bill to levels lower than either the $838 billion Senate measure or the original $820 billion House-passed measure caused grumbles among liberal Democrats, who described the cutbacks as a concession to the moderates, particularly Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., who are under pressure from conservative Republicans to hold down spending.

Working to accommodate the new, lower overall limit of the bill, negotiators effectively wiped out a Senate-passed provision for a new $15,000 tax credit to defray the cost of buying a home, these officials said. The agreement would allow taxpayers to deduct the sales tax paid on new car purchases, but not the interest on loans for the same vehicles.

With numerous demands for the funds in the bill, lawmakers worked to satisfy competing demands.

A Senate-passed provision to give $10 billion to the National Institutes of Health for research _ a favorite of both Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, and Specter _ appeared to have survived.

Not every decision was driven by concern about job creation, though.

The bill includes $70 billion to shelter wealthier taxpayers from the alternative minimum tax, originally passed a generation ago to make sure the super-rich didn't avoid taxes. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that provision will have relatively little impact on the economy.

_____

Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor and Ben Feller contributed to this story.

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ReealOne
Don't sweat the small Stuff, life is way too short
09:56 AM on 02/15/2009
Now I'm fully EXPECTING all of the GOOPers/RN­C/Republic­an Party ditto-head­s who voted AGAINST this bill with a collective NO, exactly like their ditto-head leader the INCREDIBLY LARGE Rush Limbaugh told them they had better do or know what's good for them, will NOT be accepting any money for their states.... correct? You know, due to the "principle­" thing and all.

After all, standing collective­ly looking stoopid, knowing full well that SOMETHING needed to be done, but did NOTHING except say NO, because the GOOPers felt that it was a "bad" bill simply because they couldn't control it, should not exclude them from standing with their hands out to take the money. What a bunch of self-servi­ng hypocrites and liars the GOOPers are. And trust me, NOT ONLY DOES THE AMERICAN PEOPLE REALIZE YOU COULD GIVE JACKSH*IT ABOUT THEM, BUT THE ENTIRE WORLD KNOWS NOW.

Oh yeah, I forgot. Washington is FORCING you to take the money! I gotta tell ya. Your RNC Chairman Michael Steele was right when he said "no one has any reason to believe or trust Republican­s!". You should see just how phony you look from the outside looking in. Looks like your leader Rush Limbaugh didn't tell you that... if you voted AGAINST the Stimulus, it's probably not a good idea to "accept" the money. What a pitiful bunch of self-servi­ng hypocrites and liars the Republican­s are!!! And trust me, NONE of us will forget that.
03:07 PM on 02/14/2009
This is pathetic and sorry. We have a bunch of people in Congress that voted for a stimulus package that they haven't even read. Over 1000 pages in the bill and no one knows what's in it. I don't. You don't. Nobody does. But it passed anyway. What happened to the 48 hours that the bill was supposed to be visible tot he public? Someone call Nancy Pelosi in Europe and tell her to get back to our country and tell us what is in the bill. She doesn't know because she didn't read it. Our representa­tives chastise the CEO's of Wall Street yet stuff pork in to a bill that they know no one will read. So now we get saddled with more debt for useless pork for useless polititian­s. Thanks Obama for the gift my kids get: debt. Should have checked what Obama really believed before you voted for him. Change, change, change. Vote for Obama because he's the pretty minority and he gives a good speech.
02:35 PM on 02/14/2009
This is not the change I voted for. He said transparen­cy and no one gets to read the stimulas bill. He said no lobbiest in his admin and we have lobbiest. He lied two days saying the ceo of a company would hire back people being laid off and the ceo said that wasnt true and there would be more lay off's. No he is killing innocent people with bombs. I made a big MISTAKE. I would start saying Impeach but Biden scares me more. So go ahead and talk me down because I jumped off the wagon.
11:34 AM on 02/13/2009
So the extension of unemployme­nt benefits isn't really an extension of benefits, just an extension of the time to file which goes from March 2009 to December of 2009? How jacked up is that? I was one of I'm sure millions of people thinking that there would be an extension of benefits
01:11 PM on 02/13/2009
welll, they get what they want because we're all usually fighting with each and don't have time to focus on the details of their deals. And those deals are all motivated by whatever their agenda is
09:53 PM on 02/12/2009
Is this the song that's blasting through the White House tonight...­yep...

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=eoaTl7IcF­s8

..can you keep up?
07:38 PM on 02/12/2009
can you hear me now? NOTHING YOU GET NOTHING!

D'oh! Caterpilla­r CEO Contradict­s President on Whether Stimulus Will Allow Him to Re-Hire Laid Off Workers
01:12 PM on 02/13/2009
the pain of others seems to excite you
04:46 PM on 02/12/2009
I'm a student who makes less than $6,000 a year at my on-campus job, which I qualified for through the federal work-study program, so I pay fewer taxes than I would working someplace else. Even though I don't pay as many taxes, I still don't have a lot of extra money to just throw around.

My question for people who think the stimulus should have included more tax cuts is: If I don't pay that much in the first place, then how is that supposed to help people ike myself?
01:14 PM on 02/13/2009
check out the timeline of tax cuts from right before the deression on...you'l­l see that they are what ultimately resulted in the huge tax increases FOR THE WEALTHY...­it's like not taking care of a little cut and then having to amputate
04:25 PM on 02/12/2009
If Obama succeeds at his promises, the U.S. will descend the ladder to third world status in less than a decade. The poor chap doesn’t have a clue how the U.S. economy works, any more so than he knows how national security, or virtually the entire gamut of U.S. government functions, work. Government is not the solution Mr. “O,” it is the problem. Government bureaucrat­s are empire builders. Creation of four hundred thousand new bureaucrat­ic jobs does not boost the economy, it burdens it. Government does not create economies -- it may regulate them, it may harm them, but central planning czars are reminiscen­t of Soviet central economic planning. Message to Obama, “it didn’t work.”

Happy Dae.
http://Sho­estringGen­ealogy.com
01:15 PM on 02/13/2009
so, we should be like, say India?
12:43 PM on 02/12/2009
So money for school vouchers is good because schools aren't adequate is good...mon­ey to build and improve schools is bad....got it...Thank­s Republican­s...wouldn­'t want to contribute to an education system that doesn't indoctrina­te with biblical and backwards thinking principles­...
02:16 PM on 02/12/2009
No, you don't get it. School vouchers are good because they rarely cover all the cost of a private school, but CAN bridge the gap so that middle to upper middle class families can barely afford to send their kids to an actually "good" school. The poor need to suffer with terrible schools, because as we all know, if you are a Repub, poor people are just bad people and deserve what they get. Spending money to improve existing schools might help the poor, too, and we can't have that.
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thrugreeneyez
11:21 AM on 02/12/2009
When's my bailout coming?!!

These CEO's salaries of $800,000 to $1 million are obscene and the height of pure greed.

I wish we could have done what John Stewart my hero :) wanted to do, and have a "trickle-u­p" approach by paying off consumer debt.
08:15 AM on 02/12/2009
"wasteful government spending" How do the Republican Senators and Reps so shamelessl­y continue to describe actual expenditur­e on necessary infrastruc­ture as "wasteful"­? Is there NO ONE in their electorate­s who can really bring this home to them? Someone should collect a few homeless people and go and camp on their doorsteps for a few days to show them exactly what it will be like.
01:17 PM on 02/13/2009
well, if it doesn't go directly to them, they consider it waste
07:05 AM on 02/12/2009
Homeowner and auto tax credits being cut - huge mistake. The two areas that need stimulus the most. Would have worked too.
Viper
Former repub, still repenting
03:03 AM on 02/12/2009
We need to solve the housing problem.. we cant have this deflation continue and have over half the houses upside down... How long will people pay a 400K mortgage on a house thats worth only 200K and in some states, they are paying taxes on that house of over a 400K value ( or the original 550K price).. while the guy who bought the repo next door is paying on the same house a tax based on his 200K purchase price.

There is no solution or fix until house prices stop falling and in some areas go up a 100%...

Regards
01:08 PM on 02/13/2009
oh man, viper, i forgot all about property taxes!

In West Hartford CT, right before the real estate collapse in the late 80's, they revalued the property taxes and people ended up paying taxes for say, a house valued at 200k, when in fact they could in no way shape or form selll the house for that...and then no one would even think of buying the houses cuz they couln't afford the taxes.
Viper
Former repub, still repenting
02:50 AM on 02/12/2009
How does McCain solve a recession and being jobless..

Marry a richer wife...

I need to try that!

Regards.
01:09 PM on 02/13/2009
seems to me, Bill, Barack and John lived off their wives while runnign for office
01:18 AM on 02/12/2009
Nite Blue if you are still around.