The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Time for Plan B on ‘fiscal cliff?’

Talks between Obama, Boehner apparently stalled.

- By Andrew Taylor Associated Press

WASHINGTON — It’s beginning to look like it’s time for Plan B on the “fiscal cliff.”

With talks between President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner appar- ently stalled, the leading emerging scenario is some variation on the following: Republican­s would tactically retreat and agree to raise rates on wealthier earners while leaving a host of complicate­d issues for another negotiatio­n next year.

The idea is that House GOP leaders would ultimately throw up their hands, pass a Senate measure extending tax rates on household income exceeding $250,000, and then duke it out next year over vexing issues like increasing the debt ceiling and switching off sweeping spending cuts that are punishment for prior failures to address the country’s deficit crisis. It’s not easy. For starters, that scenario has a lot more currency with Senate Republican­s, who wouldn’t have to vote for the idea after it comes back to the Democratic-controlled Senate, than with leaders of the Republican-controlled House, who would have to orchestrat­e it and who still insist they’re not abandoning talks with the White House and that they’re standing firm against raising tax rates.

“I think it’s time to end the debate on rates,” said Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C. “It’s exactly what both parties are for. We’re for extending the middleclas­s rates. We can debate the upper-end rates and what they are when we get into tax reform.”

“I think we end up with something like this Plan B,” said GOP lobbyist Hazen Marshall, a longtime former Senate aide. “They probably figure out something on the rates by the end of the year but on everything else negotiatio­ns just continue.”

House Republican­s have yet to embrace the idea.

“There are literally dozens and dozens and dozens of members out there who have various ideas for how they could endgame this,” said Boehner spokesman Kevin Smith.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama was still pursuing a broader deal that didn’t simply address the expiring tax rates, but also more revenue and spending reductions.

But he said that was out of reach if House Republican­s refused to let the top rates rise for wealthy earners.

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