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Obama holds firm on fiscal cliff: ‘I’m not going to play that game’

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President Barack Obama speaks at a cabinet meeting at the White House, Wednesday, November 28, 2012, in Washington, D.C. (Pool photo by T.J. Kirkpatrick/Bloomberg via Abaca Press/MCT)

(MCT) — WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama brushed off the latest Republican gambit to gain leverage in averting the so-called fiscal cliff, bluntly telling business CEOs in a speech Wednesday: “I’m not going to play that game.”

That flash of swagger reflects growing White House confidence about its position in the year-end showdown over scheduled spending cuts and tax increases. With less than a month to act and the wind of an electoral victory at their back, White House officials think they are boxing in Republicans.

The White House credits its strategy crafted from painful lessons of past go-rounds with the Republican-led House. Rather than engaging intensely with the GOP leadership in high-profile meetings, Obama has sought to isolate Republicans and pump up the pressure from all sides. He has picked a red line and is sticking to it. And now he’s waiting.

“The only time these guys have ever moved on something is when they have felt the outside pressure,” said an Obama adviser who requested anonymity to discuss strategy.

Both sides say they are working to defuse the scheme of tax increases and budget cuts they enacted to force themselves to reach a larger deficit-reduction deal. Experts say if nothing is done, the double blow could send the economy back into recession.

For now, though, the president has reason to be resolute, even as Republicans call on him to counter their latest offer.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner underscored that position Wednesday in an interview on CNBC. The administration is “absolutely” ready to go over the fiscal cliff if Republicans refuse to raise tax rates on the wealthy, he said.

“There’s no prospect in an agreement that doesn’t involve those rates going up on the top 2 percent of the wealthiest Americans,” he said.

Public polling shows a majority of Americans not only support the president’s push to allow tax rates to rise on the top earners but are prepared to hold the GOP responsible if negotiations fail. A new poll from The Washington Post and Pew Research Center found 53 percent of Americans said Republicans should be blamed if there is no deal, compared to just 27 percent who would blame the president.

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