First, she creates an opposition between Kerry and other dems that escape me. It seems
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/republicans-offer-tax-deal-to-break-impasse-over-debt-democratic-aides-call-it-non-starter/2011/11/08/gIQAJ6Xa1M_story.html
Kerry said the offer represents “a change” in position for Republicans, though he said, “I would not characterize it as a substantial change yet.”
Other Democrats challenged the notion that Republicans have offered significant tax increases, however. They argued that Republicans are demanding that the top income tax rate fall from 35 percent to 28 percent, a substantial decrease that would eat up any extra revenue generated by limiting deductions and leave nothing for deficit reduction.
In addition, she shows the GOP as those ready to compromise and the Democrats as unreasonable.
But the going has been slow, with lawmakers deeply divided over how much of the savings should come from tax increases and how much from spending cuts, such as cuts to Social Security and Medicare.
Democrats want a roughly equal mix of spending cuts and tax increases. They have offered to cut federal health spending by as much as $500 billion over the next decade and trim Social Security benefits by about $100 billion over the same period by using a less-generous inflation index to calculate annual cost-of-living increases. In return, however, they have demanded far more significant tax increases than Republicans say they are able to support.
Republicans, meanwhile, have been trying to compromise on a balanced mix of cuts and revenue increases, but they have been pressing Democrats to substitute other forms of revenue for outright tax increases. For example, by counting such things as fees for an array of federal services, asset sales and higher Medicare premiums for well-off seniors, Republicans say they could raise as much as $300 billion over the next decade.