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Little movement is made on ‘fiscal cliff’ budget talks

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Several influential Republicans have suggested the GOP should accept the president’s offer to extend the tax rates for most Americans while the broader budget battle continues. The Democratic-controlled Senate has already passed a bill that would extend the lower rates on the first $250,000 earned for families and $200,000 for individuals.

Top Republicans are seeking steep cuts to Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security in exchange for producing some new tax revenue. And they are attempting to shift blame to Obama for steering the nation toward the fiscal cliff.

Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, sought to refocus attention on the nation’s $16 trillion debt load, a once-powerful “tea party” issue.

Republicans intend to extract additional spending cuts in exchange for the administration’s request to raise the nation’s debt limit to cover its obligations. But Obama has said he will not negotiate over the issue as he did in 2011 and expects lawmakers to either extend the government’s borrowing authority or give him the power to do so.

Republican Rep. James Lankford, a conservative freshman from Oklahoma, noted that the spending cuts the GOP wants are to pay for last year’s increase in the debt ceiling.

“We’re waiting for the White House at this point,” he said. “We have to have as much or more cutting as we raise the debt ceiling. They’ve got to get this resolved.”

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