Philadelphia

Obama calls lawmakers over spending cuts; no resolution seen

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about the sequester after a meeting with congressional leaders at the White House in Washington March 1, 2013. Credit: Reuters
U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about the sequester after a meeting with congressional leaders at the White House in Washington March 1, 2013.
Credit: Reuters

President Barack Obama has reached out to Republican and Democratic lawmakers in search of a resolution to automatic across-the-board government spending cuts, a White House official said on Sunday, but Republican congressional leaders offered little hope for a quick solution.

House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress, and Mitch McConnell, the Senate Republican leader, both expressed confidence that there would not be a government shutdown at the end of the month amid the showdown with Obama over federal spending.

“I don’t think anyone quite understands how it gets resolved,” Boehner said on the NBC program “Meet the Press” as he put the blame squarely on Obama and his fellow Democrats.

“It’s time for the president and Senate Democrats to get serious about the long-term spending problem that we have,” Boehner said.

Obama late on Friday formally ordered broad cuts in government spending after he and congressional Republicans failed to reach a deal to avert the automatic reductions that could dampen economic growth and curb military readiness.

Government agencies now will begin to cut a total of $85 billion from their budgets from now through September 30 under automatic reductions known as “sequestration.” Half of the cuts will fall on the Pentagon.

Gene Sperling, director of the White House National Economic Council, said Obama spoke on Saturday afternoon with a select group of lawmakers to try to find a path out of the current fiscal crisis – a “bipartisan compromise.” He did not identify the lawmakers to whom Obama spoke.

“He’s reaching out to Democrats who understand we have to make serious progress on long-term entitlement reform, and Republicans who realize that if we had that type of entitlement reform, they’d be willing to have tax reform that raises revenues to lower the deficit,” Sperling said on the CNN program “State of the Union.”

Obama did not call McConnell or Boehner, Sperling said, noting that the president had met with them on Friday in a meeting that failed to resolve the issue.

McConnell played down the severity of the automatic cuts, describing them as modest.

“We’re willing to talk to him (Obama) about reconfiguring the same amount of spending reduction over the next six months,” McConnell said on CNN. “The American people look at this and say, ‘Gee, I’ve had to cut my budget more than this,’ – probably on numerous occasions over the last four years because we’ve had such a tepid economy now for four long years.”

Congress and Obama could still halt the cuts in the weeks to come, but neither side has expressed any confidence they will do so. Both Democrats and Republicans set the automatic cuts in motion during feverish deficit-reduction efforts in August 2011.

Democrats predicted the cuts could soon cause air-traffic delays, meat shortages as food safety inspections slow down, losses to thousands of federal contractors and damage to local economies across the country, particularly in the hardest-hit regions around military installations.

At the heart of Washington’s persistent fiscal crises is disagreement over how to slash the budget deficit and gain control of the $16 trillion national debt, bloated over the years by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and government stimulus for the ailing economy.

Obama wants to close the fiscal gap with spending cuts and tax hikes. Republicans do not want to concede again on taxes after doing so in negotiations over the “fiscal cliff” at the New Year.


News
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
National

Medea Benjamin: Obama heckled repeatedly about Guantanamo Bay…

A very loud woman stole the show several times as President Obama addressed a crowd of journalists during a press conference this afternoon. The apparent protester interrupted Obama several times,…

Local

Cigarette and booze tax meets City Council

Mayor Michael Nutter's proposed cigarette and liquor-by-the-drink tax bills were introduced in City Council today, and were met with some suggestions.

National

Chechen shot by FBI was tortured, father alleges

The father of a Chechen immigrant killed during questioning over his links with one of the Boston Marathon bombings suspects said on Thursday he plans to travel to the United…

Local

Matthew Royer returns to Collegeville, Pa. unharmed

Royer, the Collegeville, Pa. native who never made it back to Montgomery County after he left the University of Rhode Island for summer break on May 16, was found Thursday…

Entertainment

Baroness after the bus crash: 'Starting with a…

"This tour is in gratitude to our fans who continued to pay attention to us," says Baroness singer John Baizley of the band's post-bus crash dates.

Music

VIDEO: Conan O'Brien's hilarious response to Taylor Swift's…

Funny-man Conan O’Brien released a hilarious video response to Swift recounting his times as a too-skinny red-head 22 year- old.

Entertainment

This Memorial Day weekend, let someone else fire…

Where to eat this Memorial Day weekend.

Books

How to survive your children during the summer

Jane Roper, the author of the memoir "Double Time: How I Survived — and Mostly Thrived — Through the First Three Years of Mothering Twins," knows…

MLB

Lee dominates, Phillies top Marlins

Cliff Lee had nearly as many hits as he allowed to the Miami Marlins Wednesday night.

MLB

Philllies Notebook: Utley sits out, waiting for MRI…

Chase Utley injured, MRI results expected.

NHL

Flyers 'don't care' about hiding player injuries

Philly sports executives gather for panel discussion.

Local

Photos: Paine's skate park officially opens to the…

Wedged between the Schuylkill River and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, the park stretches across about three acres set on the Schuylkill Trail.

Style

Street style: Milan

Oxana Ong, in a graphic neon skirt suit with high slit, stand out from the crowd.

Lifestyle

Sidescroller: Apps that make your thumbs do the…

In this week's Sidescroller, we look at Endless Runners, the highly addictive, side-scroller running games popular on the iPhone and iPad.

Lifestyle

Dating: How to get laid and get paid

How to get laid and get paid and be happy.

Entertainment

It's easy to go gluten-free at these restaurants

Skip the gluten at these restaurants