After a year of relative peace in Washington's budget battles,
President Barack Obama will lay out a US$4 trillion budget on Monday
that challenges Republicans with proposals for higher taxes on the
wealthy and businesses to pay for education, public works projects and
child care.
The plan, expected to be dismissed by the Republican lawmakers now running both chambers of Congress, rolls out as the deficit is dropping and Obama's poll numbers inch higher. Though Republicans will march ahead on their own, they ultimately must come to terms with Obama, whose signature is needed on anything that is going to become law.
Big challenges loom: the need to increase the government's borrowing limit; a deadline for sustaining highway funding; a bipartisan effort to ease painful, automatic cuts to the Defense Department and domestic agencies. Those cuts are the byproduct of Washington's previous failures to tackle the government's deficit woes.
First on the agenda is the need to finalize the current-year budget for the Department of Homeland Security.
It's tied up over a Republican demand to reverse Obama's
November executive actions that extended work permits and temporary
deportation relief to some 4 million people in the U.S. illegally.
Funding for the department runs out Feb. 27. Obama planned a budget
speech at the department on Monday.
A defiant Obama challenged the Republicans in his radio and Internet address Saturday.
"If they have ideas that will help middle-class families feel some economic security, I'm all in to work with them. But I will keep doing everything I can to help more working families make ends meet and get ahead. Not just because we want everyone to share in America's success " but because we want everyone to contribute to America's success," he said.
Republicans insisted they are the champions of the middle class.
"Expanding opportunity, protecting middle-class savings, holding government accountable: These are your priorities, which means they are Republicans' priorities," Kansas Rep. Lynn Jenkins said in the Republican response to the president's radio address.
Obama's plan will contain familiar prescriptions. He wants higher taxes on upper bracket earners and the oil and gas industry. He is proposing new initiatives for education and child care. He is pitching investments in roads, bridges and other projects. And he is pushing for increases for annual agency operating budgets.
The requests come after a mostly tranquil year when Senate Democrats and House Republicans put in place the second year of a 2013 deal that eased the harshest of the automatic cuts. Republicans backed away from a confrontation over raising the government's borrowing cap.
This year will not be peaceful, though, largely because the White House will ask for a $38 billion increase for the Pentagon that Republicans probably will want to match. Obama's demand for a nearly equal amount for domestic programs sets up a showdown that may not be resolved until late in the year.
The centerpiece of the president's tax proposal is an increase in the capital gains rate on couples making more than $500,000 per year. The rate would climb from 23.8 percent to 28 percent. Obama wants to require estates to pay capital gains taxes on securities at the time they are inherited. He also is trying to impose a 0.07 percent fee on the roughly 100 U.S. financial companies with assets of more than $50 billion.
Obama would take the $320 billion that those tax increases would generate over a decade and funnel them into middle-class tax breaks for two-income families, child care, and to help pay for college.
The ideas drew scorn from Republican lawmakers who want to focus on revamping tax laws.
For 2016, the Obama budget promises a $474 billion deficit, about equal to this year's. The deficit would remain under $500 billion through 2018, but would rise to $687 billion by 2025 " though such deficits would still remain manageable when measured against the size of the economy.
On spending, Obama's plan proposes spending $60 billion over the next 10 years to pay for two years of community college for an estimated 9 million students and $80 billion to increase access to child care for low- and middle-income families. The administration wants to pay for a six-year renewal of highway and transit programs by taxing overseas business profits that would be "repatriated" back to the U.S.
The plan, expected to be dismissed by the Republican lawmakers now running both chambers of Congress, rolls out as the deficit is dropping and Obama's poll numbers inch higher. Though Republicans will march ahead on their own, they ultimately must come to terms with Obama, whose signature is needed on anything that is going to become law.
Big challenges loom: the need to increase the government's borrowing limit; a deadline for sustaining highway funding; a bipartisan effort to ease painful, automatic cuts to the Defense Department and domestic agencies. Those cuts are the byproduct of Washington's previous failures to tackle the government's deficit woes.
First on the agenda is the need to finalize the current-year budget for the Department of Homeland Security.
A defiant Obama challenged the Republicans in his radio and Internet address Saturday.
"If they have ideas that will help middle-class families feel some economic security, I'm all in to work with them. But I will keep doing everything I can to help more working families make ends meet and get ahead. Not just because we want everyone to share in America's success " but because we want everyone to contribute to America's success," he said.
Republicans insisted they are the champions of the middle class.
"Expanding opportunity, protecting middle-class savings, holding government accountable: These are your priorities, which means they are Republicans' priorities," Kansas Rep. Lynn Jenkins said in the Republican response to the president's radio address.
Obama's plan will contain familiar prescriptions. He wants higher taxes on upper bracket earners and the oil and gas industry. He is proposing new initiatives for education and child care. He is pitching investments in roads, bridges and other projects. And he is pushing for increases for annual agency operating budgets.
The requests come after a mostly tranquil year when Senate Democrats and House Republicans put in place the second year of a 2013 deal that eased the harshest of the automatic cuts. Republicans backed away from a confrontation over raising the government's borrowing cap.
This year will not be peaceful, though, largely because the White House will ask for a $38 billion increase for the Pentagon that Republicans probably will want to match. Obama's demand for a nearly equal amount for domestic programs sets up a showdown that may not be resolved until late in the year.
The centerpiece of the president's tax proposal is an increase in the capital gains rate on couples making more than $500,000 per year. The rate would climb from 23.8 percent to 28 percent. Obama wants to require estates to pay capital gains taxes on securities at the time they are inherited. He also is trying to impose a 0.07 percent fee on the roughly 100 U.S. financial companies with assets of more than $50 billion.
Obama would take the $320 billion that those tax increases would generate over a decade and funnel them into middle-class tax breaks for two-income families, child care, and to help pay for college.
The ideas drew scorn from Republican lawmakers who want to focus on revamping tax laws.
For 2016, the Obama budget promises a $474 billion deficit, about equal to this year's. The deficit would remain under $500 billion through 2018, but would rise to $687 billion by 2025 " though such deficits would still remain manageable when measured against the size of the economy.
On spending, Obama's plan proposes spending $60 billion over the next 10 years to pay for two years of community college for an estimated 9 million students and $80 billion to increase access to child care for low- and middle-income families. The administration wants to pay for a six-year renewal of highway and transit programs by taxing overseas business profits that would be "repatriated" back to the U.S.
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