Everything Obama says and does is pathetic. (Politico) — House Speaker John Boehner has already given his review of President Barack Obama’s forthcoming State of the Union address — and it’s not pretty. “I’ve read a lot about what the president is going to talk about Tuesday night, and it sounds to me like the same

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Boehner On Obama’s Upcoming State of the Union Address: “I Think It’s Pathetic”…

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Reuters – House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said on Sunday that Republicans may use an upcoming payroll tax cut bill to force President Barack Obama to approve the controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline.

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Boehner: Republicans may link pipeline to tax bill
(Reuters)

**Written by Doug Powers After a few days of positioning, John Boehner announced a little earlier today that House Republicans planned to accept a two-month payroll tax cut extension instead of the year-long deal they sought. Learn all about it on MSNBC’s holiday special, “How Obama Saved Family Friday Pizza Night .” From ABC News : House GOP leaders appeared to be adopting a compromise suggested by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell to pass the two-month extension in exchange for the Senate appointing members to a conference committee, which will negotiate a longer-term solution. The proposal won a nod of approval from President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. But Boehner was visibly unhappy with the deal. “Kicking a can down the road for a couple of months does cause problems,” he said at a news conference today. Remember, there was a Keystone pipeline provision in this. Yeah, okay, in the spirit of the season I’m just trying to help the GOP find a bright side for now. The only remaining question is this: Was Air Force One wheels-up and headed to Hawasia by the time Boehner finished the statement below? Just in case, Autopen was last seen warming up in the bullpen: Dems are already starting to spin this as the spark that will win back the House next year: Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), the chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, crowed on MSNBC that the fight would mark “a defining moment” in the party’s effort to win back the House in 2012. Nancy Pelosi’s going to think that every gift she opens on Sunday contains a gavel. **Written by Doug Powers Twitter @ThePowersThatBe

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House Repubs Agree to 2-Month Payroll Tax Cut Extension

The following is audio from the House floor where Democratic Minority Leader Steny Hoyer can be heard challenging Speaker John Boehner. Hoyer is featured below shouting, “Mr. Speaker, we’d like to ask for unanimous consent that we bring up the bill to extend the tax cut for 160 million Americans as you walk off the floor, Mr. Speaker.” “Mr. Speaker, you’re walking out. You’re walking away just as so many Republicans have walked away from middle-class taxpayers” Hoyer shouted to the then-empty chair where the Boehner sits. Fox News Insider : Watch the latest video at video.insider.foxnews.com WASHINGTON (The Blaze/AP) — Careening toward a politically toxic tax hike, President Barack Obama implored House Speaker John Boehner on Wednesday to get behind a two-month stopgap until a longer deal could be struck early next year, calling it the only real way out of a mess that is threatening the paychecks of 160 million workers and isolating House Republicans. In a weary Washington, the outreach accomplished little. All sides seemed to end the day where they began, with heavy political and economic consequences at stake. Boehner remained insistent on a full-year extension of the existing payroll tax cut before Jan. 1, urging Obama to haul Senate Democrats back to town to talk to his chosen negotiators. “Let’s get this done today,” Boehner told Obama, according to a speaker’s aide, who required anonymity to characterize a private conversation. But the Capitol was emptying out fast, and the Senate showed no inclination to return, having already passed a bipartisan two-month tax cut it thought had settled the matter. For taxpayers, and for an economy starting to show some life again, the standoff was all holiday gloom. Barring any action by Congress, Social Security payroll taxes will go up almost $20 a week for a worker making a $50,000 salary – that’s $40 less for a typical paycheck or $1,000 over the whole year. Almost 2 million people would lose unemployment benefits as well. The political risks seemed only to deepen, too, particularly for House Republicans. They appeared poised to take the biggest blame for a tax increase even while pushing for a deeper one. The reliably conservative editorial page of The Wall Street Journal blasted both Boehner and Sen. Mitch McConnell, the GOP leader, for how they handled the matter. “The GOP leaders have somehow managed the remarkable feat of being blamed for opposing a one-year extension of a tax holiday that they are surely going to pass,” the paper’s editorial said. In a year of legislative brinksmanship remarkable even by Washington standards, the latest fight spilled into the lap of Republican candidates running for president. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich chastised Congress, particularly the Senate, for failing to extend the 2 percentage point tax cut for a full year. “They can’t figure out how to pass a one-year extension, so the Senate leaves town?” Gingrich remarked while campaigning in Iowa. “It’s an absurd dereliction of duty.” Rival Mitt Romney refused to take a position, again steering clear of Washington’s hot policy debate. “I’m not going to get into the back-and-forth on the congressional sausage-making process,” the former Massachusetts governor told reporters after events in New Hampshire. “I hope they’re able to sit down and work out a solution that works for the American people.” But the White House made clear the time for talks were over for this year. “The negotiating has happened already,” presidential spokesman Jay Carney said, referring to the Senate bill the White House insists was sealed with Boehner’s blessing. Boehner disputes that he ever gave a nod of support to the two-month tax cut that many in his caucus oppose. He and other House members call it a poor and unworkable tax policy. Obama also called the Senate’s Democratic leader, Harry Reid, and praised him for the bipartisan tax-cut bill with McConnell that passed the Senate. Obama did most of the talking in his 10-minute call to Boehner. The president made clear to Boehner that this was essentially his last legislative chance: There was no other option under consideration except the two-month tax bill, no surprise last-minute deal, and no real chance that Reid was calling the Senate back, according an administration official who spoke anonymously to describe the private phone call. From Boehner’s perspective, the only real progress was that Obama had shown engagement with the speaker that he had not in weeks, according to an aide who also spoke anonymously to describe internal thinking. Obama for months has called for a year-long extension of the tax cut; he would prefer that it be deepened, too, although that idea never went anywhere in Congress. The stalemate has centered on how to pay for another year’s tax cut without adding to the deficit. That is the debate ahead – if the two-month deal gets done first. Boehner’s reaction gave no hints of a breakthrough, even though House Republicans appear increasingly isolated. They’re not getting support from Senate Republicans and are battling against a president whose approval numbers, while not impressive, are better than theirs. Earlier Wednesday, the combatants on Capitol Hill continued to fight over a battleground that’s already well worn. Reid started with a letter to Boehner urging him to bring House lawmakers back to Washington – most have left by now – and approve the bipartisan Senate measure. Reid said he was fully confident Congress could agree on a year-long tax extension, but not before the House acts to prevent a tax increase on Jan. 1. Minutes later, Boehner and other top House Republicans invited reporters into a meeting where they urged Reid to bring senators back to town so they can negotiate over a yearlong extension of the tax cut and jobless benefits. The bill would also postpone a scheduled Jan. 1 cut of 27 percent in payments to doctors who treat Medicare patients. “All we’re asking for is to get Senate members over here to work with us,” Boehner said. In a moment of political theater, Democrats tried to get the House to consider the two-month extension of the payroll tax cut as the chamber convened for a ceremonial session at which no formal business was scheduled. But acting speaker Rep. Michael Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., adjourned the chamber and walked out. Obama was to have left Washington by now for a Christmas vacation in Hawaii, where his wife and two daughters have been since the weekend. Instead, after speaking to Boehner and Reid, he found a different escape from the White House. He took his dog, Bo, and went holiday shopping.

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Listen to Steny Hoyer Shout at John Boehner House Floor Over Payroll Tax Cut Extension

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ContributorNetwork – COMMENTARY | President Barack Obama has contacted House Speaker John Boehner and urged him to bring the House back into session and pass the Senate’s two-month extension of the payroll tax cut, according to the Associated Press. As a political consultant, I believe it would be in the best interest of Speaker Boehner to follow this suggestion. It might be the only option he has right now.

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Boehner, House Should Pass Senate Payroll Tax Cut Extension — for Now
(ContributorNetwork)

**Written by Doug Powers Yesterday the Senate passed a temporary plan that would extend unemployment and the payroll tax cut for two months, and give President Obama 60 days to decide about the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline. It was thought that the House would follow the Senate and pass the bill early next week, but after John Boehner’s interview this morning, not so fast : House Speaker John Boehner said Sunday that he opposes the Senate plan to extend the payroll tax cut for two months. Boehner, R-Ohio, told the NBC program “Meet the Press” that Congress should continue negotiations to come up with a compromise by the end of the year that would extend the lower payroll tax rate for a full year, as sought by President Barack Obama. “I believe that two months is just kicking the can down the road,” Boehner said in explaining Republican opposition in the House. “I’m tired of it. … It’s time to just stop, do our work, resolve our differences and just extend it for one year. However, it requires approval by the House, and Boehner’s comments reinforced initial rejection of the plan by House Republicans, especially conservatives who don’t like the payroll tax extension in any form. The House will take up the measure Monday. Boehner apparently reversed himself since a conference call with caucus members Saturday when he was the only House Republican leader to express support for the Senate plan, according to a GOP source. Boehner was not asked about the caucus meeting in the NBC interview. Check back tomorrow as we follow the bill’s progress, or lack thereof, in the House. We’ll know right away if it does pass the House, because emanating from inside the Beltway and echoing across fruited plain will be the four of the most famous words in modern American politics: “Lobbyists, start your engines !” **Written by Doug Powers Twitter @ThePowersThatBe

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Not So Fast: Boehner Opposes Senate’s 2-Month Payroll Tax Plan

ContributorNetwork – Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner is fighting to keep the $150 million the Obama administration earmarked for a uranium plant in Ohio, according to the Columbus Dispatch. Boehner and President Barack Obama are locked in a public battle over the fate of the American Centrifuge Plant in Piketon.

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President Obama Yanks Ohio Uranium Plant Funding
(ContributorNetwork)

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Agreement near on $1 trillion spending bill (AP)

On December 15, 2011, in Uncategorized, by BojorquezLowry932

AP – Bipartisan agreement is near on a massive $1 trillion-plus year-end spending package and should be reached in time avert a possible government shutdown this weekend, lawmakers said Thursday.

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Agreement near on $1 trillion spending bill
(AP)

Midnight snacks 11.21.11

On November 22, 2011, in Uncategorized, by

Speaker John Boehner reminds Michele Bachmann of Dean Martin . Rush Limbaugh on NASCAR audience booing Michelle Obama and Jill Biden : “What is there to cheer for when Ms. Obama and Ms. Biden show up?” Mitt Romney ‘s Mormon guilt : “I tasted a beer and tried a cigarette once, as a wayward teenager, and never did it again.” Sixty percent of Americans don’t know what the hell “Occupy Wall Street” is. I’m one of the 60 percent. Who’s your daddy: Newt Gingrich says “most people” see him as the best to debate President Obama .

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Midnight snacks 11.21.11

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Ryan breaks from Boehner, votes against BBA

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Ryan breaks from Boehner, votes against BBA

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