Fair
49°
St. Charles, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Obama: Cliff deal in sight, but no votes in House tonight

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 3)

Americans "need us to all stay focused on them," Obama said. "Not on politics. Not on, you know, special interests."

Minutes after Obama spoke, Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., took to the Senate floor to denounce Obama's suggestion that Congress consider new tax dollars as an acceptable offset to delaying the sequester spending cuts.

"I know the president has fun heckling Congress," he said of Obama's speech. "It's unfortunate that he doesn't spend as much time working on solving problems as he does with campaigns and pep rallies."

A top aide to House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., tweeted that Obama was making a deal harder with his speech, in which he observed that he would be president for the next four years and that Republicans have already caved on higher taxes for the wealthy. Both comments drew hearty campaign-style applause from his audience.

"If Obama's goal was to harm the process and make going over the cliff more likely, he's succeeding," tweeted Doug Heye.

A top aide to McConnell charged that Obama had changed the terms of negotiations in his speech.

"Potus just moved the goalpost again. Significantly. This is new," wrote Josh Holmes, McConnell's chief of staff.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., delivered a blistering critique, accusing Obama of seeking short-term political gain at the expense of the nation's economy. He denounced the speech as "a cheerleading, ridiculing of Republicans exercise."

"So, what did the president of the United States just do?" McCain asked in a floor speech. "Well, he made a couple of jokes, laughed about how people are going to be here for New Year's, sent a message of confrontation to the Republicans.... I guess I have to wonder — and I think the American people have to wonder — whether the president really wants this issue resolved, or is it to his short-term political benefit for us to go over the cliff?"

Earlier, with a New Year's Eve deadline hours away, Democrats abandoned their demand to raise tax rates on household income over $250,000 a year. Obama had vowed repeatedly during his reelection campaign to allow tax cuts to expire for incomes over that level.


Reader Poll

Have you ever been to Bellevue Place in Batavia?

Yes, I've been in the building
Yes, but I've only seen it from the outside
No