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House to vote on debt ceiling as some conservatives object

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Boehner also gave assurances that automatic spending cuts due to take effect March 1 “will be in place unless and until we get spending cuts and reforms to replace it, and that start us down a path to balance within the decade.”

Still, ``tea party’’ groups, key conservatives and several Republican House members who want to use the debt ceiling as leverage against the White House to force Obama to rein in federal spending balked at the short-term solution.

“This proposal is more of the same,” said Dean Clancy, legislative counsel for FreedomWorks, a conservative group. “Once again, Republican leadership is negotiating with itself to temporarily bail the big spenders out by lifting the U.S. debt limit for four months, with no immediate accompanying budget reforms or spending reductions.”

The Tea Party Patriots denounced the bill in an email call to action Tuesday that urged its members call their House member and set up a meeting with them next week to register their opposition to the Republican-sponsored bill.

“The willingness to kick the can down the road is easy,” said Tea Party Patriots co-founder Jenny Beth Martin. “We understand the Republican strategy. But when it comes right down to it, this strategy will cost our country.”

Several House Republicans expressed unease over the bill and a few said they intend to vote against it. A defeat of the measure would be another setback for Boehner, who was forced to pull his “Plan B” proposal during the fiscal cliff showdown because of a lack of House Republican support.

Boehner is banking that his assurances will tilt some Republicans who’ve expressed skepticism about the short-term plan.

But freshman Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., said Tuesday that he’s likely to buck his party leadership and vote against the measure.

“If your principles lead you to vote for a three-month debt limit extension, which one of your principles would prevent you from voting for a one-year extension?” Massie said. “It’s a difficult vote, the most difficult in my two months here. I’m suspect that the strategy will work. It’s like punting on first down.”

Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, told Fox News’ Lou Dobbs that the plan won’t work “without spending cuts.”

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