"Here's the problem," Boehner
told "Fox News Sunday" as both sides took their battle to TV talks
shows. "When you go and increase rates, you make it more difficult for our
economy to grow," he said. Besides,
Boehner said, if Republicans agreed to give President Barack Obama $1.6 trillion
in new tax revenue, "He's going to spend it," not reduce the deficit.
Geithner, Obama's top negotiator, said
in a separate appearance on Fox that Republicans must step up.
The treasury secretary said Republicans
will be responsible if no deal is reached by the end of the month, triggering
the "fiscal cliff," deep automatic spending cuts and across-the-board
tax hikes that could plunge the country into a recession. "There's not going to be an agreement
without rates heading up," Geithner said on CNN's "State of the
Union."
With polls showing most Americans favor
raising tax rates on the wealthy and cracks starting to appear in what had been
a solid wall of Republican opposition to such a move, the Obama administration
figures it has the upper hand.
"The president has seen a lot of
options from us. There are a lot of them on the table and I'm hopeful that the
conversation will continue," Boehner said.
Boehner also reaffirmed his party's
opposition to Congress giving the president sole authority to increase the U.S.
debt limit, a power both Democrats and Republicans value. "Silliness. Congress is never going to
give up this power," Boehner said, explaining it provides lawmakers needed
leverage in dealing with the White House.
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