Friday, July 22, 2011

Republican House Speaker John Boehner quits debt talks

Republican House Speaker John Boehner quits debt talks

President Barack Obama  
 
President Barack Obama said he had been willing to take "a lot of heat" from his party

Republican House Speaker John Boehner has walked away from crunch debt ceiling talks at the White House with US President Barack Obama.
Mr Obama said Mr Boehner had rejected an "extraordinarily fair deal" that would have included $650bn (£400bn) of cuts to entitlement programmes.
Mr Obama said he had been willing to take "a lot of heat" from his party.
Mr Boehner said in a letter circulated to the Republican rank and file: "In the end, we couldn't connect."
"I have decided to end discussions with the White House and begin conversations with the leaders of the Senate in an effort to find a path forward," the letter said.
'Call not returned' The talks were aimed at avoiding what analysts say would be a financially catastrophic US debt default on 2 August.
"It is hard to understand why Speaker Boehner would walk away from this kind of deal," President Obama said at a news conference on Friday evening.
"There are a lot of Republicans who are puzzled as to why it couldn't get done," he added.
Senior Republican aides said President Obama and congressional Republicans had been close to reaching a deal last week, but that the White House had changed its demand to call for higher taxes.
White House correspondents said Mr Obama looked visibly angry as he told reporters that until "sometime early today when I couldn't get a phone call returned, my expectation was that Boehner was going to go to his caucus" to help finalise a deal.
Despite the breakdown in talks, Mr Obama said on Friday that he was confident the $14.3tn (£8.7tn) limit on US borrowing would be raised by the approaching deadline.
Republicans have been unwilling to consider raising new tax revenues to counter the growing budget deficits.
The Democrats have been opposed to cutting popular healthcare and welfare programmes for pensioners and the poor.

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