Pages

Subscribe:

Ads 468x60px

Infolinks In Text Ads

gumgum

Tweet, Share & Like

Showing posts with label John Boehner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Boehner. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

200 Members of Tea Party Rally to Support John Boehner

Nearly 200 members of area Tea Party chapters rallied on Monday afternoon at the local office of the nation's highest ranking Republican. It was a show of force in support of U.S. House Speaker John Boehner in the showdown over America's debt ceiling and taxes.

Many came to hand letters and messages backing Boehner for his positions in recent weeks for resisting raising the nation's debt limit without spending cuts and opposing tax hikes. More so than any other Congressional leader, Boehner has been the high profile face of opposition in negotiations with President Barack Obama.

Andrew Pappas, president of the Anderson Township Tea Party chapter, said the rally was to let Boehner know fiscal conservatives locally and across the region are backing him fully during the high stakes negotiations.

"I think the pressure on speaker Boehner is tremendous and this show of support may be just what he needs," said Pappas. "And I think it is very important that speaker Boehner not just hear from the tea party, but from all of his constituents who think Washington has a spending problem not an income problem."

Negotiations between the president and congressional leaders broke down over the weekend. Boehner has maintained that spending cuts should be greater than the increase in the debt limit - with no tax increases. Some economists argue that a debt agreement is needed to stave off federal default.

Even as the rally was on, the status of negotiations in the nation's capital remained in flux with both Boehner and Democratic leaders making new proposals Monday afternoon and Obama then announcing he will make a 9 p.m. televised speech on the impasse. Tea Party organizers said they handed over more than 500 letters from supporters to staffers from Boehner's home congressional office.

The rally was organized by the West Chester Tea Party but supporters from throughout Southwest Ohio and Northern Kentucky attended. Jerry and Carol Ling - self-described fiscal conservatives - drove up from their home in Cold Spring, Ky. to support Boehner.

Carol Ling said concerns about burdening the next generation of Americans with suffocating debt drove them to the rally. "We're in this fight for our kids and grandkids," she said.

Debt Crisis: Barack Obama and John Boehner Clashed on Monday Night

Over the cause and cure for the nation's debt crisis, President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner clashed on Monday night. The two men spoke as Congress remained gridlocked on legislation to avert a threatened default after Aug. 2.

Decrying a "partisan three-ring circus" in the nation's capital, Obama assailed a newly minted Republican plan to raise the nation's debt limit as an invitation to another crisis in six months' time. He said congressional leaders must produce a compromise that can reach his desk before the deadline.

"The American people may have voted for divided government, but they didn't vote for a dysfunctional government," the President said in a hastily arranged prime-time speech. He appealed to the public to contact lawmakers and demand "a balanced approach" to reducing federal deficits including tax increases for the wealthy as well as spending cuts.

Responding moments later from a room near the House chamber, Boehner said the "'crisis atmosphere" was of the President's making. "The sad truth is that the President wanted a blank check six months ago, and he wants a blank check today. That is just not going to happen," the speaker said. "The President has often said we need a 'balanced' approach, which in Washington means we spend more, you pay more."

Obama stepped to the microphones in the East Room of the White House a few hours after Republican lawmakers, then his own Democrats, drafted rival emergency legislation to head off a potentially devastating default. The back-to-back speeches did little to suggest that a compromise was in the offing, and the next steps appeared to be votes in the House and Senate on the rival plans by mid-week.

Despite warnings to the contrary, U.S. financial markets have appeared to take the political maneuvering in stride -- so far. Wall Street posted losses Monday but with no indication of panic among investors. Without signed legislation by day's end on Aug. 2, the Treasury will be unable to pay all its bills, possibly triggering an unprecedented default that officials warn could badly harm a national economy still struggling to recover from the worst recession in decades.

Obama wants legislation that will raise the nation's debt limit by at least $2.4 trillion in one vote, enough to avoid a recurrence of the acrimonious current struggle until after the 2012 elections. Republicans want a two-step process that would require a second vote in the midst of the 2012 campaign with control of the White House and both houses of Congress at stake.

Monday night's speeches were a remarkable turn in a 6-month-old era of divided government as first the President, then his principal Republican opponents appealed to the nation in a politically defining struggle. Obama quoted Ronald Reagan -- a hero to many conservatives -- who also spoke of a balanced plan and stressed a need for compromise. Obama stopped well short of threatening a veto of the GOP-drafted legislation that he criticized.

Boehner's remarks seemed aimed at the general public and also at conservatives -- tea party advocates included -- who installed the Republicans in power in the House last fall. There were concessions from both sides embedded in Monday's competing legislation, but they were largely obscured by the partisan rhetoric of the day. With their revised plan, House Republicans backed off an earlier insistence on $6 trillion in spending cuts to raise the debt limit.

And while the President didn't say so, his embrace of legislation unveiled by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid effectively jettisoned his long-standing call for increased government revenues as part of any deficit reduction plan. The measure Boehner and the GOP leadership drafted in the House called for spending cuts and an increase in the debt limit to tide the Treasury over until next year.