CBS NEWS
Legislation to negate a fiscal cliff of across-the-board tax
increases and sweeping spending cuts to the Pentagon and other
government agencies is headed to the GOP-dominated House after
bipartisan, middle-of-the-night approval in the Senate capped a New
Year's Eve drama unlike any other in the annals of Congress.
CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes reports from Capitol Hill that the House vote could come as early as 1 p.m. Tuesday.
The measure cleared the Senate on an 89-8 vote early Tuesday, hours
after Vice President Joe Biden and Senate Republican Leader Mitch
McConnell of Kentucky sealed a deal.
It would prevent
middle-class taxes from going up but would raise rates on higher
incomes. It would also block spending cuts for two months, extend
unemployment benefits for the long-term jobless, prevent a 27 percent
cut in fees for doctors who treat Medicare patients and prevent a spike
in milk prices.
The measure ensures that lawmakers will
have to revisit difficult budget questions in just a few weeks, as
relief from painful spending cuts expires and the government requires an
increase in its borrowing cap.
House Speaker John
Boehner pointedly refrained from endorsing the agreement, though he's
promised a vote on it or a GOP alternative right away. But he was
expected to encounter opposition from House conservatives.
"It's
three strikes in my book and I'll be voting no on this bill," Rep. Tim
Huelskamp told CNN Tuesday morning. Huelskamp says the legislation would
impose a hardship on small businesses around the country and falls
short of addressing the need for cuts in spending.
Cordes reports that Democrats expect almost all of their members to vote in favor of the deal.
The
measure is the first significant bipartisan tax increase since 1990,
when former President George H.W. Bush violated his "read my lips"
promise on taxes. It would raise an additional $620 billion over the
coming decade when compared with revenues after tax cuts passed in 2001
and 2003, during the Bush administration. But because those policies
expired at midnight Monday, the measure is officially scored as a
whopping $3.9 trillion tax cut over the next decade.
President Obama praised the agreement after the Senate's vote.
"While
neither Democrats nor Republicans got everything they wanted, this
agreement is the right thing to do for our country and the House should
pass it without delay," Mr. Obama said in a statement. "This agreement
will also grow the economy and shrink our deficits in a balanced way -
by investing in our middle class, and by asking the wealthy to pay a
little more."
The sweeping Senate vote exceeded
expectations - tea party conservatives like Pat Toomey, R-Pa., and Ron
Johnson, R-Wis., backed the measure - and would appear to grease
enactment of the measure despite lingering questions in the House, where
conservative forces sank a recent bid by Boehner to permit tax rates on
incomes exceeding $1 million to go back to Clinton-era levels.
"Decisions
about whether the House will seek to accept or promptly amend the
measure will not be made until House members - and the American people -
have been able to review the legislation," said a statement by Boehner
and other top GOP leaders.
Lawmakers hope to resolve any
uncertainty over the fiscal cliff before financial markets reopen
Wednesday. It could take lots of Democratic votes to pass the measure
and overcome opposition from tea party lawmakers.
Under
the Senate deal, taxes would remain steady for the middle class but rise
at incomes over $400,000 for individuals and $450,000 for couples -
levels higher than Mr. Obama had campaigned for in his successful drive
for a second term in office. Some liberal Democrats were disappointed
that the White House did not stick to a harder line, while other
Democrats sided with Republicans to force the White House to partially
retreat on increases in taxes on multi-million-dollar estates.
The
measure also allocates $24 billion in spending cuts and new revenues to
defer, for two months, some $109 billion worth of automatic spending
cuts that were set to slap the Pentagon and domestic programs starting
this week. That would allow the White House and lawmakers time to
regroup before plunging very quickly into a new round of budget
brinkmanship, certain to revolve around Republican calls to rein in the
cost of Medicare and other government benefit programs.
Officials
also decided at the last minute to use the measure to prevent a $900
pay raise for lawmakers due to take effect this spring.
Even
by the dysfunctional standards of government-by-gridlock, the activity
at both ends of historic Pennsylvania Avenue was remarkable as the
administration and lawmakers spent the final hours of 2012 haggling over
long-festering differences.
Republicans said McConnell
and Biden had struck an agreement Sunday night but that Democrats pulled
back Monday morning. Democrats like Tom Harkin of Iowa said the
agreement was too generous to upper-bracket earners. Mr. Obama's
longstanding position was to push the top tax rate on family income
exceeding $250,000 from 35 percent to 39 percent.
"No deal is better than a bad deal. And this look like a very bad deal," said Harkin.
The
measure would raise the top tax rate on large estates to 40 percent,
with a $5 million exemption on estates inherited from individuals and a
$10 million exemption on family estates. At the insistence of
Republicans and some Democrats, the exemption levels would be indexed
for inflation.
Taxes on capital gains and dividends over
$400,000 for individuals and $450,000 for couples would be taxed at 20
percent, up from 15 percent.
The bill would also extend
jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed for an additional year at a
cost of $30 billion, and would spend $31 billion to prevent a 27
percent cut in Medicare payments to doctors.
Another $64
billion would go to renew tax breaks for businesses and for renewable
energy purposes, like tax credits for energy-efficient appliances.
Despite
bitter battling over taxes in the campaign, even die-hard conservatives
endorsed the measure, arguing that the alternative was to raise taxes
on virtually every earner.
"I reluctantly supported it
because it sets in stone lower tax rates for roughly 99 percent of
American taxpayers," said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. "With millions of
Americans watching Washington with anger, frustration and anxiety that
their taxes will skyrocket, this is the best course of action we can
take to protect as many people as possible from massive tax hikes."