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House approves short-term debt ceiling lift; GOP lawmakers to demand more spending cuts

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — Stepping up their austerity campaign, House Republicans plan to demand far deeper spending cuts from President Barack Obama to balance the federal budget in just 10 years, an extraordinary goal that would hit Medicare and other safety-net programs.

House Speaker John A. Boehner, R-Ohio, confronted with a more conservative Republican majority, agreed to the dramatic initiative to coax reluctant rank-and-file lawmakers Wednesday to approve a temporary suspension of the $16.4 trillion debt limit without any cuts in spending.

The new proposal to balance the budget in a decade would zero out the federal deficit almost twice as fast as previous Republican efforts.

“It’s time for us to get serious about how over the next 10 years we balance this budget and put America on a sustainable fiscal path,” the speaker said after the debt ceiling measure passed the House, 285-144. It now goes to the Senate, which is also expected to approve it.

The House vote puts the White House and Congress on another collision course in the budget battles that are expected to consume the first months of Obama’s second term.

Republicans, who agreed to modest tax hikes on the wealthy in the year-end budget deal, have insisted that the next round of deficit-reduction must come from the spending side of the ledger.

But because Republicans want to protect the Pentagon, their approach would require steep reductions in domestic programs — particularly education, infrastructure investment and the safety net for low- and moderate-income Americans.

House Republicans will write their new budget in the coming weeks, but similar blueprints for eliminating the deficit in 10 years have pointed to austere measures: turning Medicare into a voucher-like program and raising the age at which seniors become eligible; cutting food stamps and school lunches; holding other domestic accounts flat.

Republicans believe the public will be on their side, even though they lost the presidential election with the architect of the last House budget on the ticket. Rep. Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, the wonkish Budget Committee chairman, again will take the lead in crafting the new budget.

Ryan said he did not see the electoral loss as a rejection of the party’s principles. “I think we need to do a better job of applying our principles to the problems of today, to show solutions to the country’s biggest problems and how they relate in people’s everyday lives,” he told reporters Wednesday at a breakfast hosted by the Wall Street Journal.

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