Obama says spending deal close, Boehner doesn’t

WASHINGTON (AP) — A bullish President Barack Obama said Friday that compromise is close with Republicans on $33 billion in budget cuts, and he warned that without a deal the ensuing government shutdown would “jeopardize our economic recovery” just as jobs are finally being created.

Despite his assessment, negotiators reported little progress, Senate Democrats backtracked on a key concession from earlier in the week and Congress’ top Republican sounded less optimistic than the president that a breakthrough was imminent.

“There is no number. There is no agreement on a number” on how much to cut, insisted House Speaker John Boehner, who is under pressure from tea party-backed conservatives not to give too much ground. Still, he added, “I am not preparing for a government shutdown.”

Funding for the government expires next Friday at midnight, and without action by Congress, a partial shutdown would follow.

The day’s events occurred against a backdrop of unusually upbeat news about the economy, which is still recovering from the worst recession since the Great Depression. The Labor Department reported that companies added 216,000 jobs last month and the unemployment rate fell slightly to 8.8 percent.

Nearly six weeks after the House passed a bill calling for $61 billion in cuts, it appeared the endgame was at hand in the first of what is expected to be a series of political battles over the size and scope of government.

“We will be working through the weekend to forge a compromise,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. At Republican insistence, Congress has already cut $10 billion in spending as part of a pair of stopgap spending bills to keep the government open for business.

While another short-term bill has not been ruled out, Obama, Boehner, Reid and others have said they would prefer to complete work on a six-month bill to close out the budget year.

Already, Republicans are looking ahead to unveiling a 2012 budget next week, after weighing privately whether to delay so they could focus all of their attention on the current clash.

Administration officials have been heavily involved in the negotiations on the spending bill, but the president struck something of an above-the-fray note on Friday.

“Given the encouraging news we received today on jobs, it would be the height of irresponsibility to halt our economic momentum because of the same old Washington politics,” he said.

“It can’t be ‘my way or the highway politics,’ said the president, who has sought in recent months to recapture the support of independents who helped elect him in 20008 but defected to the Republicans in last fall’s elections.

“We know that a compromise is within reach. And we also know that if these budget negotiations break down, it could shut down the government and jeopardize our economic recovery.”

Shortly before Obama spoke, Reid shifted the Democrats’ position on one key element of the talks, in apparent deference to environmentalists angered by an earlier concession.

“Neither the White House or the Senate leaders is going to accept any EPA riders,” he said in a conference call with reporters.

House Republicans included provisions in their $61 billion package of spending cuts that would block the EPA from implementing regulations on a variety of industries.

Democratic officials indicated earlier in the week some of them would be incorporated into any agreement as part of a deal under which Republicans would agree to accept total cuts less than $61 billion.

In response to Reid’s statement, Kevin Smith, a spokesman for Boehner, said, “If they are taking EPA riders off the table, then we’re certainly not ‘close’ to a deal.”

In fact, it appeared the two sides had agreed to little, except that they would assemble a framework to cut $33 billion from current spending levels.

The original House measure would cut $61 billion from domestic accounts, including administration priorities such as education and infrastructure.

Senate Democrats and the White House have proposed adding defense cuts to the bill in an attempt to reduce the burden on domestic programs. Boehner declined at his news conference to say whether that was acceptable to him.

The speaker has assumed an increasingly public role in the past week, making numerous appearances before television cameras to stress that Republicans want to cut spending but do not favor a government shutdown.

In doing so, he has spent part of his time countering Democratic accusations, but he also has sought to maintain his ability to compromise in the light of tea party demands.

At a news conference during the day, Rep. Paul Broun, R-Ga., said any bill with less than $61 billion was an insult, and he vowed to vote against it.

But a half dozen or more other Republicans, most of them first-termers, declined to follow his lead, making it clear that they are prepared to accept some sort of compromise.

Another first-term Republican, Rep. Tim Scott, R-S.C., said “The further you get from $61 billion, the less likely” he and the other 86 freshmen Republicans are to support a deal.

But he, like others, declined to say what sort of compromise he was ready to vote for.

SportsPlus

Mower County

City putting out the call for nominations for Pillars of the City

News

Cannabis agency drops plans for licensing fast track, early 2025 retail launch in Minnesota grows doubtful

Austin Living

Austin Living: Song of the Season

Mower County

Paramount shifts to free admission for final live performance of the year

Mower County

In Your Community: Unity Chapters give to local organizations

Mower County

In Your Community: VFW donates to North Start Honor Flight

Mower County

In Your Community: Apple Lane celebrates food drive

Mower County

Help MnDOT name more snowplows! Submit your idea by Dec. 20

News

A prayer across the rural-urban divide: ‘Open our hearts, open our brains’

Blooming Prairie

Education Briefs

News

‘Polarization’ is Merriam-Webster’s 2024 word of the year

News

Justice Department ignored some policies when seizing reporters’ phone records, watchdog finds

News

Nikki Giovanni, poet and literary celebrity, has died at 81

Education

Board approves 6.73% levy increase

News

Trump promises to end birthright citizenship: What is it and could he do it?

Adams

Southland to present ‘Little Women’

News

How should the opioid settlements be spent? Those hit hardest often don’t have a say

News

Man arrested with weapon ‘consistent with’ gun in killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO, police say

Business

Tradition of Service: Muffler Center to celebrate 50 years with open house on Dec. 14

Mower County

Cost-share available for old wells

Mower County

Christmas in the County to be held at Historical society on Dec. 14

Mower County

In Your Community: Duplicate Bridge

Mower County

In Your Community: Mower County Senior Center

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Convictions: Nov. 25-Dec. 2