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John Boehner May Rebuff Tea Party In Upcoming Payroll Tax Cut Fight

John Boehner Tea Party Payroll Tax Cut

Posted: 01/13/12 08:25 AM ET

By Richard Cowan and Thomas Ferraro

WASHINGTON--House Speaker John Boehner, hoping to spare fellow Republicans a second embarrassing defeat over payroll tax cuts, is prepared to navigate around rebellious Tea Party-aligned lawmakers to get a deal, according to congressional aides.

Republicans in the House of Representatives got a public drubbing from critics within and outside the party in December for initially refusing to approve a Senate plan to extend the tax break for 160 million Americans through February.

The party of lower taxes was left on the defensive, countering a barrage of criticism that its unwillingness to compromise threatened an effective tax hike on workers, potentially damaging the fragile economic recovery.

Now, with Democratic and Republican negotiators preparing for a new round of talks in the coming days to extend the payroll tax cut for the rest of the year, Republican leaders are anxious to move quickly to get a deal, aides said.

Party leaders fear another battle could distract from the more important task at hand - ousting President Barack Obama from the White House and winning majority control of the Senate in the November elections. They also want to neutralize an issue that Democrats already are using to their advantage in the presidential and congressional campaigns.

"I think Boehner will seek a more accommodating approach to get a good percentage of Democrats to vote for it - even if it costs him a lot of House Republican freshmen," one House Republican leadership aide told Reuters.

"His instincts will be not to be so reliant on House Republican freshmen," the aide added, referring to the 85 first-term congressmen.

The freshmen, many of whom are aligned with the populist budget-slashing Tea Party movement, helped the Republican Party win control of the House in 2010 and have since proven stubbornly uncompromising in the debate over taxes and spending.

Congress has until February 29 to agree on extending the tax cut, which would give the average middle-class family about $1,000 extra a year.

Support has always been soft among Republicans for the payroll tax cut championed by Obama. They question its effectiveness in stimulating the economy and the wisdom of using revenues intended for the Social Security retirement program.

But the political fallout from the December showdown with Democrats was so unpleasant for Republicans that some congressional aides now speculate that Republicans might push to accelerate a deal by January 24, when Obama gives his annual State of the Union address to Congress.

BIGGER BILL/BIGGER PROBLEMS?

Many Tea Party-aligned lawmakers in the House are bitter that Boehner ultimately caved to pressure and agreed to the two-month extension in December. When Boehner informed his caucus of his decision in a conference telephone call, rank-and-file members' phone lines were muted in an effort to quell dissent.

Some Tea Party lawmakers, however, see round two of the payroll tax cut negotiations as another opportunity to press their demands for cuts to unemployment benefits and some federal healthcare programs and a freeze on federal workers' pay.

Those are unlikely to be accepted by Democrats who feel they have the political upper hand. But in the end, Boehner is expected to settle for a deal that gets the job done even if he loses the support of scores of Republican freshmen.

A senior Senate Republican aide said December's drama might have even strengthened Boehner's hand. Given that a conservative groundswell in late December to block the two-month payroll tax cut, against Boehner's advice, "backfired in a big way," some of those conservatives might now conclude that "Boehner knows what he's doing" and fall into line with him.

Boehner spokesman Kevin Smith would not address the potential divisions among Republicans. Instead, he noted "bipartisan support for extending payroll tax relief for a full year, extending and reforming unemployment benefits, and offsetting the cost with spending cuts, while there is bipartisan opposition to tax hikes."

Freshman Republican Representative Jeff Landry, a Tea Party favorite, said that while he favors cutting workers' taxes, the payroll tax cut is "a terrible idea" because it taps revenues that are supposed to be dedicated to Social Security.

Asked about Boehner's strategy for getting the full-year extension through the House by February, Landry said: "I don't know how he's going to play it. I hope he does a better job than the last time."

Landry said he will look closely to see if and how the next payroll tax cut is paid for. That is where Tea Party-aligned lawmakers could again make things more complex on Capitol Hill.

Many in Congress think this could be the first and last major bill to pass Congress in this election year, except for must-do spending measures to keep the government operating.

Lobbyists are bombarding Congress for requests to add pet projects onto the payroll tax cut bill - mainly extending about $35 billion worth of tax breaks for businesses that expired on December 31. Those include a research and development tax credit and a shorter depreciation period retailers enjoyed for business improvements.

While these tax incentives typically enjoy broad support in Congress, the lost revenues, amid huge budget deficits, likely will spark a loud debate over whether they must be paid for.

Republicans have long argued that the cost of these kinds of tax breaks do not have to be offset, as they spur economic growth over the long run and pay for themselves. It is an idea many Democrats and economists have challenged as unfounded.

Now, some fiscally conservative Republicans are joining in.

"I think everything has got to be fully paid for. We can't afford to increase the debt more or rob more money out of Social Security," freshman Representative Jeff Denham told Reuters.

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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By Richard Cowan and Thomas Ferraro WASHINGTON--House Speaker John Boehner, hoping to spare fellow Republicans a second embarrassing defeat over payroll tax cuts, is prepared to navigate around...
By Richard Cowan and Thomas Ferraro WASHINGTON--House Speaker John Boehner, hoping to spare fellow Republicans a second embarrassing defeat over payroll tax cuts, is prepared to navigate around...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sskepticall
02:53 AM on 02/15/2012
My unemployed Republican friend says this to Johnny Boehner about the new approach to their failed efforts for helping him and others as Speaker Boehner is trying to fix the Republican party's election year problems....

Now you say you're lonely,
You cried the whole night through.
Well you can cry me a river,
Cry me a river,
I cried a river over you.

Now you say you're sorry,
For being so untrue.
Well you can cry me a river,
Cry me a river,
I cried a river over you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mirrorwrlds
A world with infinite possibilities.
05:39 PM on 01/29/2012
If the GOP want to make this the last stand before the elections Boehner should ask Newt how well that went for him.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
phatdaddy51
heros;jefferson, paine and beth warren
07:51 AM on 01/19/2012
some folks knew six months ago that boehner was eventually going to need the help of democrats to defeat the right wing radicals in his own house.

tp'r's caused boehner to take stands on positions that were harmful to his party, but...he took the stands anyway.

grover norquist also played a hand in this foolhardy game of chicken. a seriously bad strategy harmful to everyone.

direct result of tp'r's obstruction....second term for mr. obama. we thank you knotheads much for playing the game so poorly.
01:22 PM on 01/14/2012
Go away Boehner and take Cantot and Mitchell with you.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:30 PM on 01/13/2012
Is Boehner finally decided to STOP the crying and has grown a new setof COJONES ???
08:58 PM on 01/13/2012
WHAT TEASPOONER PARTY ????? After Romney wins S.C., Boehner will know what we've all known; The teaspooners were a fabrication from the Koch brothers, promoted by a ridiculous cable channel, designed to take advantage of gullible seniors and low information rubes.
07:53 PM on 01/13/2012
The freshman Republican Congress members know nothing about governing. They were bought and paid for by the Koch brothers.
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07:06 PM on 01/13/2012
Looks like Boehner is Growing a Pair!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
time2talk
An eye for an eye and we'll all be blind
07:19 PM on 01/13/2012
If alcohol makes them shrivel, he's in big trouble.
07:00 PM on 01/13/2012
Please, please continue making a spectacle on extending the payroll tax cuts so the drubbing will be worse in November.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
time2talk
An eye for an eye and we'll all be blind
07:03 PM on 01/13/2012
And please continue to boast about what you are doing! The PR is doing wonders for our guy. Obama 2012! Vote out the GOP in the House and Senate.
10:20 PM on 01/13/2012
Sorry not this time. Obama is one and done.
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umen
Proud 47%er; I earned that.
06:59 PM on 01/13/2012
"Many in Congress think this could be the first and last major bill to pass Congress in this election year, except for must-do spending measures to keep the government operating."

Seriously? No jobs bills? In an election year where all of the polls show that jobs/economy is far and away the number one concern of the electorate? No jobs bills? Where are the jobs, Mr. Boehner???
06:57 PM on 01/13/2012
Boehner is on the ropes. He held the country hostage with his stand on the debt ceiling increase and caused the country to drop in their financila rating. He pulled it again in December over the payroll tax and got burned. Now he will change his tune because his leaders are finally seeing that their party's "JUST SAY NO" tactics have been rejected by the voting public. The GOPers are scrambling. They can't find a candidate that is electable. They have protected the special tax handling for the wealthy when a majority of voters want the taxes to be more equitable and they have sold out to big business. The GOP is taking on water....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
time2talk
An eye for an eye and we'll all be blind
07:04 PM on 01/13/2012
They're going to have a hard time swimming against the tide!!!!
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06:19 PM on 01/13/2012
I gotta remember to hide and watch that..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alvin12
06:15 PM on 01/13/2012
Boehner is just trying to save his political ASSperations
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
time2talk
An eye for an eye and we'll all be blind
06:56 PM on 01/13/2012
Too little, too late.
06:04 PM on 01/13/2012
The democrats know that they will reform Social Security while the Republicans plan is to hand it over to wall street as a new cash cow for them to play with at the tax payers expense.
12:34 AM on 01/14/2012
There is nothing to hand over, the government has been using it as a cash cow for decades.