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Now Republicans, Democrats don’t even agree on when sequester starts

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McConnell complained that “the Democrats who control Washington still haven’t put forward a serious bipartisan plan; not the president and not his allies in Congress.”

“Now, less than 48 hours before the clock runs out, all they’ve offered is a gimmicky tax hike that’s designed to fail,” McConnell added. “I hope they’re not expecting a round of applause for this particular act of political bravery.”

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who visited the White House on Wednesday, said the sequester mess was a pox on both the White House and Capitol Hill.

“Keep in mind sequestering was an idea that came out of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue and the Senate and House, both sides of the aisle,” said Bloomberg, a Republican-turned-political independent. “This was something all of these elected officials find a good idea, and I find it fascinating that they are trying to blame each other for it. They all voted for it.”

As a prelude to Friday’s meeting, the White House and Democrats continued to outline the dire consequences that some Americans might find themselves in under sequester. Wednesday was Education Secretary Arne Duncan’s turn.

Briefing reporters at the White House, Duncan listed a series of cuts that would come in the department’s biggest areas: $400 million from early childhood education, affecting 70,000 children and 14,000 teachers; $725 million from a fund for poor children, which would affect 10,000 teachers; $600 million from special education, which would affect 7,200 teachers; $86 million in higher education, which means that 70,000 college students might go without grants and work study; and $60 million from areas or regions where Native Americans and military families live.

“For us to be thinking about taking steps backwards in all of these areas because folks in Washington can’t get their act together is a level of dysfunction in Congress that — it’s just like unimaginable to me,” Duncan said. “I can’t tell you how troubling that is to me and, frankly, how angry it makes me feel.”

He added that public school systems across the nation would be forced to lay off teachers and shorten the school year in some places. He said that one county in West Virginia already had issued pink slips in anticipation of the cuts.

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