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White House proposes unidentified tax hikes, new stimulus spending; GOP rejects plan

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — The Obama administration Thursday offered to get the nation off the fiscal cliff with a package that includes $1.6 trillion in tax increases over 10 years, more controversial spending to stimulate the economy and a permanent solution to the fights over raising the nation’s debt ceiling.

The plan was quickly derided by Republicans, with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., branding the offer as “completely unrealistic.”

The proposal was offered by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in a series of private meetings with congressional leaders on Capitol Hill. Unless the White House and Congress agree to an alternative plan, Bush-era tax cuts will expire at the end of the year and $109 billion in automatic spending cuts — called a sequester — will take effect Jan. 2.

Experts warn that the fiscal jolt from those two events could send the fragile economy back into recession.

President Barack Obama and congressional leaders met for an opening round of talks Nov. 16 but have not met since, and no meetings are planned. Obama will take his case to Pennsylvania on Friday, a trip Republicans bitterly criticized.

The Obama opening bid is a two-stage plan, according to congressional sources who released the details on condition of anonymity.

There would be an immediate increase in top marginal income tax rates on high incomes, as well as on capital gains and dividends. Current top rates are 33 percent and 35 percent; they would rise to 36 percent and 39.6 percent on Jan. 1. The marginal rates are applied to income above a certain threshold, not all of the taxpayer’s income.

Obama has long supported keeping the lower Bush-era rates for individual incomes below $200,000 and family income below $250,000.

Those changes would raise an estimated $960 billion over 10 years, according to the nonpartisan analysts. The plan also calls for unspecified “additional tax increases” of $600 billion, returning the estate tax to 2009 levels, extending current business tax breaks that expire as well as a fix to prevent the creeping alternative minimum tax from hitting 30 million households.

Under the president’s opening bid, the temporary 2 percentage point cut in the payroll tax, now set to expire at the end of next month, would either be extended or a new “alternative policy” would take its place.

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