Daily Caller – Acknowledging that it is “not good for Democrats” to go “head-to-head” with “any church,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told The Daily Caller that he and his Democratic caucus “totally” support President Barack Obama forcing religious institutions to cover contraception in employee health insurance plans or pay a federal fine.

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Reid: Dem ‘caucus totally supports’ president’s fight against Catholic Church [VIDEO]
(Daily Caller)

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has postponed a vote he had scheduled for the controversial measure next week.

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SOPA and PIPA opponents successfully delay Congressional action

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**Written by Doug Powers The measure that was agreed upon yesterday passed this morning by unanimous consent : The U.S. Congress passed a two-month payroll tax cut extension eight days before its scheduled expiration after House Republicans dropped their objections under growing political pressure. The plan will go to President Barack Obama for his signature. It would extend a two-percentage-point payroll tax cut, continue expanded unemployment benefits and head off a reduction in Medicare payments to doctors through February. Lawmakers plan to negotiate on a longer-term extension in the new year. “I hope this Congress has had a very good learning experience, especially those who are newer to this body,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, told reporters after his chamber’s action today. “It seems that everything we’ve done this past year has been a knock-down, drag-out fight. There is no reason to do that.” The deal that House Speaker John Boehner, an Ohio Republican, and Reid, a Nevada Democrat, agreed to yesterday also calls on Obama to accelerate approval of the Keystone XL Canadian oil pipeline. President Obama will sign it soon, if he hasn’t already, and then it’s off to Hawasia tout de suite : **Written by Doug Powers Twitter @ThePowersThatBe

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Congress Passes Payroll Tax Cut, Unemployment Extension

**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

**Written by Doug Powers Last I heard, the House vote on the Senate-approved plan that would extend the payroll tax cut and unemployment for two months (which also includes a provision for the job creator that dare not speak its name) was to take place this evening. At this time, the odds of House passage are slim to none : Speaker John A. Boehner said Monday that the House would reject a Senate plan for a two-month extension of payroll tax relief and unemployment benefits, and called on Congress to work through the holidays if necessary to find agreement on longer-term legislation. But Senate Democratic leaders said they had no immediate plans to call the Senate back to work out a deal with the House, leaving the fate of the legislation, which would also prevent a 27 percent cut in Medicare payments to doctors, unclear. Harry Reid said he will not re-negotiate the deal: “I will not re-open negotiations until the House follows through and passes this agreement that was negotiated by Republican leaders, and supported by 90 percent of the Senate,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said in a statement. The pomegranate trees are calling the Senate Majority Leader home for the holidays, Mr. Speaker. Have you no heart? Meanwhile, Boehner played the Rick Astley card over the weekend, saying he’ll never give up on Obama: Despite the partisan atmosphere in Washington and the quagmire on Capitol Hill, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) says he’s not abandoned efforts to cut bipartisan deals with President Barack Obama. Boehner, though, added that the partisan stalemate is not his fault, or the GOP’s. “I never give up, and I’ll never give up on this president and this process to try to help do what the American people sent us here to do ,” Boehner declared on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Boehner was responding to Obama’s assertion that Republicans will oppose anything that he supports in order to see a Republican win the White House. If President Obama is so sure the Republicans will oppose anything he’s for, why doesn’t he just come out and support the Keystone pipeline? Problem solved. Update: No vote until Tuesday : The U.S. House of Representatives will vote on extending an expiring payroll tax cut tomorrow, delaying a plan to hold a vote on a two-month extension tonight. “The plan is for us to meet in the morning and do this in the light of day,” Representative David Dreier, the California Republican who heads the House Rules Committee, told reporters as he left a meeting of House Republicans. “There was a great sense of this whole notion of acting in the dark of night.” Good call. The “dark of night” votes should be reserved only for congressional pay raises and other assorted sneaky odds & ends . **Written by Doug Powers Twitter @ThePowersThatBe

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Boehner: House Will Reject Senate’s 2-Month Payroll Tax and Unemployment Extension; Update: Vote Delayed Until Tuesday

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(The Blaze/AP) Democratic lawmakers are considering whether to jettison their demand for a millionaires’ surtax, which they had hoped to use to cover the cost of a Social Security payroll tax cut extension for millions of wage-earners, officials said Wednesday. No decisions had been made, the officials stressed. If party leaders go ahead, it would mark a concession to Republicans in the year-end standoff over the tax cut extension that President Barack Obama requested and leaders in both parties say they want. The officials declined to be identified by name because they were discussing legislative strategy. The disclosure came as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and other leading Democrats went to the White House to meet with Obama. The subject of that meeting was not announced. The developments occurred one day after the Republican-controlled House approved legislation to extend the payroll tax cut, renew jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed and head off a threatened 27 percent cut in payments to doctors who treat Medicare patients. Obama has threatened to veto the bill, in part because it also mandates the construction of an oil pipeline from Canada to Texas. However, Senate Democrats have been unable to advance an alternative measure, in large part because Republicans are almost unanimously opposed to higher taxes. In its most recent form, the Democratic plan would have slapped a 1.9 percent surtax on income over $1 million, raising an estimated $140 billion over a decade.

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Dem Lawmakers May Drop Millionaire Tax in Year-End Dispute

AP – Courting disaffected conservatives, House Republican leaders offered Friday to overturn a pair of Obama administration environmental policies and avert a deep cut in payments to doctors treating Medicare patients as part of legislation renewing a Social Security payroll tax cut through 2012.

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Republicans seek support for a payroll tax plan
(AP)

Superfrauds

On November 24, 2011, in barack obama, Health Care, Uncategorized, by

Our government has the time to worry about school lunch menus in Boise, Idaho, but the Senate hasn’t found the time to pass a budget in Washington, D.C., in nearly three years. H.L. Mencken famously wrote that every decent man is ashamed of his government. This one gives you little choice.

Lockstep

Gridlock is ordinarily the most constructive and moral form of government, but with entitlement programs on autopilot self-destruct, we’re in trouble. So Americans turned their weary eyes toward a dream team, a supercommittee, a 12-member panel of our brightest lights , charged with identifying a measly $1.2 trillion in deficit savings over 10 years. Save us. Alas, for Democrats, it boiled down to the most important issue facing the nation — maybe ever: “revenue enhancement.” Politico reported that during the supercommittee hearing, both sides agreed to produce “wish lists” to offer some notion of where negotiations might go. Republicans — believe them or not — claimed to want to save $700 billion by block granting Medicaid, another $400 billion in spending cuts, $1.4 trillion in cuts to some mandatory health care programs, and about $150 billion in cuts to the federal workforce. Democrats, on the other hand, reportedly wanted to pass a new $447 billion spending bill (perhaps forgetting that this was a wish list for a deficit   reduction committee) and $1 trillion in tax hikes on those 1-percenters. Since Washington spent $1 trillion more than it took in just last year, this would provide nearly no purpose over 10 years — well, other than a political one. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid — taking a break from fending off fictional goblins, Kochs and Norquists — laid out his position , explaining that Republicans had undermined the entire process by insisting “on expanding President Bush’s tax giveaways to millionaires.” The good Lord, you see, created every dollar for the U.S. Treasury to spend wisely; what you keep is a gift — a giveaway. Every tax cut is temporary, and every tax increase is a new base line. That’s just how it works. And the good senator from Nevada must be making a compelling case. A new poll by Quinnipiac University claims that 44 percent of Americans blame Republicans for the supercommittee’s failure, whereas 38 percent blame Democrats. This, notwithstanding the fact that the same poll shows, by a 49-39 percent margin, Americans prefer closing the deficit with spending cuts only. (That is what democracy looks like.) The committee’s failure allegedly means that an automatic $1.2 trillion in cuts should kick in. It won’t happen. Some Republicans are already grousing about defense cuts, and the newly involved Barack Obama — the guardian of frugality — has warned Congress that he would veto any cuts to the automatic cuts. Will anyone slash any defense spending before an election? Doubtful. Granted, the GOP talks a big game about reform but offers very little in the way of specifics. Republicans do, however, deserve credit for stopping tax increases until both parties start the discussion on entitlement reform. One side doesn’t define what compromise should look like. The supercommittee’s failure is victory because any so-called compromise would have meant the institution of tax hikes, and spending cuts would only be as good as the next Congress’ emergency or new priority. But everyone understands that this entire process was theater. If members of Congress, with a $15 trillion debt and a trillion-dollar yearly deficit, can’t find $1.2 trillion to cut in 10 years, the only reason is they aren’t serious. ——————- Follow on Twitter @ davidharsanyi .

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Superfrauds

Daily Caller – Despite the failure of President Obama’s jobs bill in the Senate last week, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Monday that Senate Democrats will continue to “pursue” $30 billion in education stimulus spending included in the bill, along with $5 billion to “retain” police, firefighters and first responders.

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Reid: Dems will ‘pursue’ $35 billion stimulus in Obama jobs bill
(Daily Caller)

debsinger2 citizenbrad Time for some classic Obama Bus Tour photoshops (more here ). Yep, he’s on the road again — campaigning on the taxpayer’s dime for who knows what whenever. In the aftermath of the Senate’s rejection of his massive government jobs slush fund, the White House will now push for passage of a slew of mini-slush funds and bailouts. Public employee unions first, of course — with a dose of “We are the Occupiers You’ve Been Waiting For.” The Hill reports: President Obama is returning to the road this week to press Congress to start passing the American Jobs Act, beginning with $35 billion for states to put teachers and first-responders to work. But White House officials said Sunday that Obama will not be sending a separate piece of legislation to Congress, referring questions about the process to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio). …The first piece Obama wants is $35 billion in aid for states to prevent the laying off of or support increased hiring of teachers, police officers and fire fighters, [WH spokesman] Earnest said. …Earnest said that as Obama travels this week, the president will “continue to acknowledge the frustration that he himself shares” with Wall Street. And using the popular refrain from the Occupy crowds, Earnest said that Obama will ensure “the interests of 99 percent of Americans… is well represented[.]” At the end of the trip, Earnest said, “the message will be clear: Pass the bill this week to protect the job of a North Carolina teacher, or come down here, look her in the eye and explain to her why protecting” tax cuts for the wealthy is more important than passing the jobs bill. Let’s hope he finds a teacher who’s actually out of work this time to promote as poster child.

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New Obama bus tour message: Pass whatever whenever — and we are the occupiers you’ve been waiting for!