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At edge of fiscal cliff, everyone fights to protect his bit of budget

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Others are pushing for changes in those same programs.

In a letter to Congress signed by more than 200 businesses, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said that lawmakers should extend all of the expiring tax cuts, including those for income above $200,000, and turn instead to entitlement programs. “Our nation’s entitlement programs are unsustainable. If we do not make sensible reforms, the programs will go bankrupt — and so will the nation,” said the letter.

Meanwhile, the American Sustainable Business Council and Business for Shared Prosperity sent Congress a letter signed by 600 business owners, urging that the top rates go up.

“Contrary to what tax-cut defenders claim, job creation is driven by customer demand, not taxes,” said Josh Knauer, president and CEO of Rhiza Labs, a Pittsburgh-based software company.

But taxing the wealthy has its downside, as several groups are arguing that limiting charitable deductions for the most well-to-do will hurt everything from the arts to education to relief efforts by the American Red Cross.

“We understand this idea of capping deductions is gaining some ground with both parties,” said Geoff Plague, interim vice president for public policy at Independent Sector, an association that represents nonprofits. “Our message is that there ought not to be a cap because of the impact on charitable giving.”

The Charitable Giving Coalition, representing more than 50 nonprofit organizations and charities, is taking to Capitol Hill on Dec. 5 during the lame-duck session of Congress to make the case for preserving the existing charitable deduction.

All of this leaves lawmakers with the task of weighing the special interests.

No member will concede that an interest group directly influences his or her vote. They all say they’ll listen to anyone, but what they want is information.

“It’s often hard to separate the politics from the presentation,” said Rep. Joseph Crowley, D-N.Y. “You can’t avoid it; it’s part of the life of being a member of a legislature.”

They also see another motive in the pitches. “A lot are generating funds,” said Rep. Gene Green, D-Texas.

Sen. Michael Crapo, R-Idaho, is one of the Senate’s “Gang of Eight,” four Democrats and four Republicans who have been working for years to craft a bipartisan budget deal.

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