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Obama says he wants balanced approach to fiscal cliff negotiations

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White House spokesman Jay Carney in a Friday media briefing laid out exactly that scenario, suggesting that Republicans would have a hard time explaining why they let the tax breaks for the middle class expire. “What is the argument for not passing it? That we’re going to force everyone to have a higher tax bill next year just because millionaires and billionaires didn’t get a tax cut?” he said.

Obama’s remarks at the White House were his first since winning an unexpectedly solid victory over GOP nominee Mitt Romney. A core part of his campaign was his promise to make the nation’s top earners “pay their fair share.”

Exit polls of voters released Tuesday showed that 47 percent of Americans supported Obama’s proposal to raise tax rates on income above $250,000 for couples. Another 13 percent said all should pay more in taxes, while 35 percent were against any tax increase.

The president delivered his opening salvo with a hint of stump-speech style and stagecraft. The White House packed the East Room with supporters and positioned the president’s podium in front of a group of citizens — “middle-class Americans and other stakeholders who want to see a balanced approach,” the White House later explained. The group cheered Obama loudly as he entered.

Obama and Boehner laid out their opening positions in the language of compromise, claiming to read the election results as a push toward more cooperative government. The House speaker told reporters, “It’s clear that as a political party, we’ve got some work to do.”

The president said he viewed the election results as a call to action and presented himself as open to new ideas. “I want to be clear: I’m not wedded to every detail of my plan. I’m open to compromise,” Obama said.

Some saw potential areas of agreement in the carefully worded statements. Obama stressed that he wants the wealthy to “to pay a little more in taxes.” But he did not specify how much more or demand that top rates rise from 35 percent to 39.6 percent, as scheduled. He did not address whether he would accept changes to the tax code that eliminate deductions or loopholes, a way to raise some taxpayer’s bills without raising rates.

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