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President Obama Reacts to Debt Commission Report: "We're Going to Have to Make Some Tough Choices"
November 11, 2010 1:38 AM
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA – President Obama refrained on Thursday from addressing specific proposals to reduce the debt put forward by his presidential Debt Commission, but he called on politicians to hold their fire and work in a bipartisan way to solve the momentous dilemma of the nation’s $13.7 trillion debt.
“I have not seen the final report from the Deficit Commission,” the president said at a joint appearance with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, after a reporter asked him for reaction. “I have said very clearly until I see the final report that I will not comment on it because I want them to have the space to do their work. They are still in negotiations.”
Mr Obama pointed out that the two co-chairs of the Commission – former Clinton White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles and former Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyoming -- are trying to secure 14 out of 18 votes on the commission for their recommendations to go forward, “and I want to make sure they’ve got the room and the space to do so.”
The draft report by the co-chairs presents some painful and politically unpalatable recommendations, not merely $2 trillion in spending cuts and $1 trillion in tax increases over the next decade, but also means-testing Social Security, raising the retirement age to 69, expanding the payroll tax, closing one third of overseas US military bases and raising the gasoline tax.
There is something in the proposal to offend everyone, whether doctor (reducing Medicare fees for doctors), lawyer (enacting tort reform to “reduce the cost of defensive medicine”), or Indian chief (ending payments to Native American tribes for abandoned mines).
The president said he convened the commission “precisely because I am prepared to make some tough decisions” but he “can’t make them alone.”
“I need Congress to work with me,” he said. “We’re going to have to make some tough choices. The only way to make those tough choices historically has been if both parties are willing to move forward together.”
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http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2010/11/president-obama-reacts-to-debt-commission-report-were-going-to-have-to-make-some-tough-choices.html#tp