Slowly but surely, little by little, the number of Republicans willing to at least “revisit” the lavish tax cuts passed over the last five years is growing. The question then becomes how quickly — or how successfully — will the rest of the party smack down the very idea.
Yesterday, Treasury Secretary John Snow opened the door slightly, saying “tax cut permanence” may be pushed to the “back burner.” Even more surprisingly, the Washington Post reported this gem:
…White House officials said Snow was accurately reflecting Bush’s intentions.
Adding to the “momentum,” if you want to call it that, was Sen. Judd Gregg’s new-found flexibility on the issue.
The chairman of the Senate Budget Committee refused to rule out increasing taxes yesterday as he and many of his GOP colleagues called for offsets to temper the effect of the next round of federal spending for disaster relief in the Gulf Coast.
“We’ve got two sides to the ledger,” said Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.). “I’m willing to look at a revenue solution … as part of a package.”
Not surprisingly, not everyone is on board with fiscal sanity.
But about 90 minutes [after Treasury Secretary John Snow’s comments], House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) held a news conference in his office and asserted that “we’re not reexamining” the commitment to extend the tax cuts. “That’s not an option,” DeLay said, then, for emphasis, added: “Not an option.”
The fracture is becoming more apparent every day. There’s a reasonable group of Republicans who are willing to at least consider scaling back tax cuts, and there’s an even larger group who are anxious to gut federal spending. Bush, meanwhile, watches from the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, waiting, wondering what he’ll do.
So far, it’s not going well.
Trying to allay mounting concerns, White House budget director Joshua B. Bolten met with Republican senators for an hour after their regular Tuesday lunch. Senators emerged to say they were annoyed by the lack of concrete ideas for paying the Hurricane Katrina bill.
“Very entertaining,” Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said sarcastically as he left the session. “I haven’t heard any specifics from the administration.”
“At least give us some idea” of how to cover the cost, said Sen. Conrad Burns (R-Mont.), who is facing reelection in 2006. “We owe that to the American taxpayer.”
The pushback on Katrina aid, which the White House is also confronting among House Republicans, represents the loudest and most widespread dissent Bush has faced from his own party since it took full control of Congress in 2002.
Sounds like the Republicans need a president who can lead. Too bad they’re stuck with Bush.