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House Republicans remain torn over automatic budget cuts

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — As House Republicans struggle to resolve their differences over how to deal with deep automatic budget cuts set to take effect in three weeks, Senate Democrats have largely sided with President Barack Obama’s call for a mix of spending cuts and revenue increases.

Obama traveled to Annapolis, Md., on Wednesday to meet with Senate Democrats at their private retreat and spent an hour working the room. Democrats appear to have embraced his call for a balanced approach, believing Americans prefer that to the austerity measures proposed by Republicans, according to Senate aides who asked not to be identified so they could talk about the internal discussions.

But Republicans remain torn over whether to stick with the automatic cuts as a trophy in their deficit busting crusade, or seek another approach that would avoid the deep hits to the military by shifting the burden onto Medicare and other domestic accounts. At the moment, the cuts are scheduled to be divided between military and domestic accounts.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and a bicameral group of GOP defense hawks proposed their own alternative Wednesday to protect the military: reduce the federal workforce by hiring only one new worker for every three vacancies over the next decade, a proposal that is certain to draw protest from Democrats, particularly in states with many federal workers.

In proposing the alternative, House Armed Services Committee Chairman Howard “Buck” McKeon, R-Calif., said Pentagon cuts must be prevented, otherwise “that’s going to start costing lives.”

Replacing the automatic cuts would be a daunting task. It would require Congress to find a way to cut or raise about $12 billion a month — about 5 percent of federal outlays. The GOP proposal unveiled Wednesday would create $85 billion in savings by cutting the federal workforce — enough to postpone the cuts for seven months, or through the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30.

But devising an alternative is fraught because battle lines have hardened. Republicans refuse to consider the new tax revenue that Obama wants.

“The tax question has been settled,” said House Speaker John A. Boehner, R-Ohio, a reference to the year-end “fiscal cliff” deal that increased taxes on the wealthiest Americans.

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