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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs

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From: DuckTapeSunroof2/18/2010 12:17:32 PM
   of 71588
 
Obama creates panel to tackle deficit, debt

Feb 18, 2010
content.usatoday.com

With several strokes from several pens, President Obama created a fiscal commission this morning that's supposed to begin erasing $14.3 trillion in government red ink.

Well, not so fast. First the panel, headed by Democrat Erskine Bowles and Republican Alan Simpson, must be fleshed out with 16 more members: four appointed by Obama, six by congressional Democrats and six by congressional Republicans (who have yet to say whether they'll play ball).

Then it must spend most of the year coming up with ways to slash the $1.6 trillion federal budget deficit and $14.3 trillion national debt. After that, it must get at least 14 of 18 "yes" votes to send any recommendations to Congress -- a process that guarantees bipartisanship or gridlock.

Obama optimistically called it a "thankless task" in thanking the two men who will take it on. He singled out Simpson, who at 6'7" should be able to take on any tall order, as "flinty" -- an understatement for those who covered the Wyoming lawmaker in the Senate before he abdicated for the ivory towers of Harvard.

"If you look in the dictionary, it says 'flinty' and then it's got Simpson's picture," the president said. Simpson, wearing a wild tie, just grinned.

Obama was more reverential in noting that Bowles, as White House chief of staff for Bill Clinton, helped broker the 1997 deficit reduction law that was followed by four years of budget surpluses.

The two men "are taking on the impossible," Obama said. "They're going to try to restore reason to the fiscal debate."

The panel is Obama's second choice, following the Senate's defeat of a tougher one that could have assured congressional action. This one, like countless others in the past, can be ignored if lawmakers -- even after the 2010 elections -- don't have the nerve to cut spending and, possibly, raise taxes.

But the president said the "quandary" of a government that routinely spends way more than it takes in must be addressed. When he took office last year, he said, the ratio was 25% of gross domestic product spent, 16% raised in taxes.

Interestingly, the word "tax" wasn't mentioned by Obama. Spending, however, was much on his mind. "These are tough times, and we can't keep spending like they're not," he said.

"The politics of dealing with chronic deficits is fraught with hard choices," Obama said. "As a consequence, nobody's been too eager to deal with it."

(Posted by Richard Wolf)
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