Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    6 senators push bipartisan plan to cut deficit

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The bipartisan "Gang of Six" senators on Tuesday offered a major plan to cut the deficit by almost $4 trillion over the coming decade, but whether it can break through the budget debate will depend on whether Republican lawmakers can find a way to endorse well over $1 trillion in new tax revenues reaped as Congress overhauls the loophole-choked U.S. tax code.

    The plan would also repeal a new long-term care program established under last year's health overhaul and force an additional $500 billion in cuts from federal health care programs over the upcoming decade, according to documents provided to senators but not publicly released.

    It also appears that the revenue increases are significantly higher than advertised by plan proponents because the measure assumes that the more than $1 trillion cost of repealing the alternative minimum tax over the coming decade will be offset by curbing tax breaks as tax reform is debated. The minimum tax was enacted in 1969 to make sure taxpayers pay at least some income tax, but it was never indexed for inflation it and now threatens more than 20 million tax filers with big tax increases unless extended next year.

    The Gang of Six plan is separate from a politically freighted effort to lift the nation's borrowing cap and avoid a first-ever default on U.S. obligations. President Barack Obama and Capitol Hill Republicans, however, have failed to reach an accord on what kind of spending cuts to pair with any increase in the borrowing cap.

    The six senators are Tom Coburn, R-Okla., Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., Kent Conrad, D-N.D., Mark Warner, D-Va., and Dick Durbin, D-Ill.

    Their plan calls for an immediate $500 billion "down payment" on cutting the deficit as the starting point toward cuts of more than $4 trillion over the coming decade that would be finalized in a second piece of legislation. Most of those savings would come from four years of caps imposed on the day-to-day budgets of Cabinet agencies set by the annual appropriations bills.

    It would also curb the growth of Social Security benefits by moving to a lower inflation adjustment for annual cost-of-living updates.

    Depending on how one keeps score, the measure would save $3.7 trillion to $4.7 trillion over the coming decade. The lower figure is measured against a lower spending "baseline" based on a fiscal 2011 budget law enacted earlier this year. But if measured against Obama's request for the current 2011 budget year — the standard used by Obama's deficit commission last year — the plan would save the higher figure.

    The tax reform outline would set up three income tax rates — a bottom rate of 8-12 percent; a middle rate of 14-22 percent; and a top rate of 23-29 percent — to replace the current system that has a bottom rate of 10 percent with five additional rates, topping out at 35 percent.

    It would reduce but not eliminate tax breaks on mortgage interest, higher-cost health plans, charitable deductions, retirement savings like individual retirement accounts and tax-free savings accounts known as 401(k)s and tax credits for families with children.

    Like the president's deficit commission, the Senate group's plan calls for a fundamental overhaul of the tax code that would slash special tax preferences and deductions as a way to lower tax rates — along the lines of the 1986 tax reform measure signed into law by President Ronald Reagan. It would skim more than $1 trillion of the revenue to reduce the deficit and, advocates say, spur the economy and further fill federal coffers because of growth.

    Further complicating matters is the fact that the Bush-era tax cuts expire next year. According to the Congressional Budget Office, extending the Bush cuts amounts to a further tax cut, but Republicans have long insisted that extending the Bush tax cuts and maintaining rates at current levels is simply current policy.

    Relative to CBO estimates, therefore, the Gang of Six plan would provide a $1.5 trillion tax cut over 10 years; but measured against current tax policies, it's a tax increase exceeding $2 trillion under Congressional Budget Office estimates.

    The plan assumes that the taxes paid on large estates would revert to 2009 levels rather than follow a more generous estate tax cut plan passed last year.

    The measure would ensure that both domestic programs and the Pentagon budget absorb cost cuts.

    The plan wouldn't produce a balanced budget but would reduce deficits as a share of the size of the economy down to 3 percent by 2014 and down to 2 percent by 2019, levels that would stabilize the debt and ensure that it doesn't swamp the economy by forcing up interest rates and crowding out investment.

    The measure also calls for overhauling programs like Medicare, Social Security and farm subsidies. The details of the changes would be left to congressional committees to draw up in a manner similar to the existing budget process.

    Much of the responsibility would fall to the powerful Finance Committee, which has sweeping responsibility for tax policy and health care programs such as Medicare. The panel would be directed to find savings from other federal health care programs to cover the $300 billion cost of making sure the fees doctors receive under Medicare aren't cut under an outdated 1997 budget law. It would also have to come up with another $200 billion in health savings to devote to defraying the deficit.

    In addition, the Armed Services Committee would be assigned $80 billion in savings, mostly from cuts to military retirement and health care accounts, but the Agriculture Committee would only have to find $11 billion over 10 years from farm subsidies. Conrad and Chambliss are strong supporters of farm programs.

    The plan also envisions overhauling laws governing medical malpractice to generate further savings from the health care system.

    How do you feel about this article?

     

    18 comments

    • On the knoll  •  10 months ago
      Be wary of anything that Dick Durbin is associated with.
    • galvatron  •  10 months ago
      there ya go raise taxes in this economy
    • Myco  •  10 months ago
      These are huge middle class tax increases:
      "It would reduce but not eliminate tax breaks on mortgage interest, higher-cost health plans, charitable deductions, retirement savings like individual retirement accounts and tax-free savings accounts known as 401(k)s and tax credits for families with children."
      As always Dems want revenue on the backs of us all. This is no compromise. Go with the current bill that the house approved.
    • galvatron  •  10 months ago
      so much for increase in SS every jan
    • junior  •  10 months ago
      Again RICH people get the tax rates cut, while middle income home tax deductions aree reduced. Not fair again!
    • js  •  10 months ago
      The so-called Gang of Six sellout cannot pass. If it does, the Republican Party will be over and all who vote for the plan will not be re-elected.
    • Mark  •  10 months ago
      Diversion from real issue.
      A "Gang of Approximately 130 Million" will settle this out in Presidential and Federal Elections of 2012...
      • a yahoo user 10 months ago
        unfornetly the elections over...maybe u have till 2012 to pay ur debt but the rest of america only has til the end of july

        sorry for the news bub
    • Blue Planet  •  10 months ago
      Gang sign: "$"
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 months ago
      Most Americans don’t realize we are in a civil war and its Americans Middle Class fighting Wall Street and the Wealthy Elite Corporate breaks subsidy economy status quo Washington lobbyist legalize bribery
    • SouthernBeachGuy  •  10 months ago
      So now they want to take away our deduction on our Home mortgage and deduction for saving for our Retirement. Do right and get penalized. how about cutting money for Welfare of people that have taken money for generations and never contributed to this country. I can now not only say Obama is an Idiot, but now we have six idiots more.
    • Andy Bald  •  10 months ago
      Since the irresponsible tax cuts passed by republicans beginning in 2001 the budget has not been balanced. The next seven years republicans could not find spending cuts to match the huge loss in taxes collected. If the privileged multimillionaires were paying their share of taxes the deficit would not be any bigger today than it was in 2000. So what was so important that republicans drastically cut the tax rate for those who take the wealth out of our businesses? The only reason for the cuts is that republicans wanted to secure the political support of the richest and most powerful Americans. In return these incredibly rich people who received this huge cash gift, have thanked the republicans with contributions to their campaigns and protection from media criticism that an independent press would be heaping on republicans for the incompetence and dishonesty of republican leaders. For republicans to jeopardize our economic health to gain political advantage for their party is a betrayal of public trust that America can not tolerate. We need our representatives to manage the government and act in the interest of the country. They should be working to keep our economy strong, our people safe, and find solutions to our dependency on oil, and create the best plan to keep global climate change under control and other important work that must get done. Giving huge cash gifts so republicans hold power and enrich themselves and the party, then removing health care from disabled Americans to solve the cash shortage they created is probably the most horrible act I have ever seen. These selfish crooks must be stopped. If our justice system were doing their job republicans would be facing charges for the crimes they commit, but the Supreme Court is concerned with getting their share of corporate wealth and will not uphold our laws. We need new leaders. America is being forced to make a correction. The greedy politicians and corrupt court will not act. We need to shut this mess down before these heartless criminals do any more damage. Compare the years of prosperity before the scandal in the 2000 stolen election, to eight years later in 2008. The republican administration and republican Congress destroyed our healthy economy, transformed the richest most power country in the world, to the verge of economic collapse. They have also harmed our justice system to the point that we can not expect justice or equality under law, and side stepped the democratic process, and taken away some of our individual freedom in favor of corporate freedom. The republicans have done more damage to this country, than any enemy in our history.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 months ago
      Can't wait for the gang of millions to go after these scumbags and hang them from the nearest tree---Justice is the one thing you should always find---she's coming and bringing her friends-got rope?
    • remember the alamo  •  10 months ago
      Gang of Six should be more aptly titled "Gang of Sick". Durbin is a marxist at heart and Chambliss is a fraud (one of the most corrupt porkers in the Senate). Crapo, Warner and Conrad are weak kneed moderates who stand for nothing. And one has to wonder why Coburn would want to associate himself with such a bunch of self-interested maglomaniacs. And tis is the best our country has to offer? Boy, the good old USA is in big trouble.
    • chubbieewubbiee  •  10 months ago
      B.F.D. then it will be 24 trillion instead of 28 trillion from today's 14 or so

      shouldn't we be trying to get the 14 down instead of it going up ?
    • Jerry  •  10 months ago
      The middle class is mostly Democrats. Better than 50 million who pay little to nothing for the services they consume. That means we have a Federal Government ran by Democrats for the benefit of Democrats. And, they have the guts to say Republican don't pay their fair share. So, let the poor and middle class make the jobs that we all need so badly.
    • Mike  •  10 months ago
      Does anyone remember why they voted in the Bush tax cuts to begin with? It was to return the surplus that was left over by the Clinton admin. Ihe second round came at a tim of war. The first time in our history. Even John McCain screamed on the floor "YOU NEVER CUT TAXES AT A TIME OF WAR" and was chastised by the GOP establishment. Then they voted in the prescription drug benifit for seniors....then voted down any funding for it. But we are supposed to buy that we "Have to quit blaming Bush" and "Obama owns this!" Folks, we're smarter than that. The deficit went from 6 trillion to almost 13 trillion under Bush and HE owns that, along with his party. SO ....everything else is just politics.
    • Michael  •  10 months ago
      I applaud the six who will take a lot of heat from all sides for a compromise solution to a issue that has both Republicans and Democrats establishing dogmatic positions based on party lines. Only compromise can move us off a path for disaster. Unfortunately, this will need to be one of many compromises to fix the full extent of the problem.
    • ☠ BOSSK☠الساحر كافر  •  10 months ago
      US Constituion States:

      Article 1.

      Section 7: All Bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives; but the Senate may propose or concur with Amendments as on other Bills.

    Featured Blog Posts