Congressional Democrats Balk at Obama Jobs Bill
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By Jennifer Steinhauer, NYT) September 16, 2011 President Obama anticipated Republican resistance to his jobs program, but he is now meeting increasing pushback from his own party.
Many Congressional
Democrats, smarting
from the fallout
over the 2009
stimulus bill, say
there is little
chance they will be
able to support the
bill as a single
entity, citing an
array of elements
they cannot abide.
“I think the
American people are
very skeptical of
big pieces of
legislation,”
Senator Bob Casey, a
Democrat from
Pennsylvania, said
in an interview
Wednesday, joining a
growing chorus of
Democrats who prefer
an à la carte
version of the bill
despite White House
resistance to that
approach. “For that
reason alone I think
we should break it
up.”
Senator Harry Reid
of Nevada, the
majority leader, has
said he will put the
bill on the
legislative calendar
but has declined to
say when. He almost
certainly will push
the bill — which Mr.
Obama urged Congress
to pass “right now!”
— until after his
chamber’s recess at
the end of the
month; Mr. Reid has
set votes on
disaster aid,
extensions for the
Federal Aviation
Administration and a
short-term spending
plan ahead of the
jobs bill.
Republicans have
focused their attack
on the tax increases
that would help pay
for the spending
components of the
bill.
But Democrats, as is
their wont, are
divided over their
objections, which
stem from Mr.
Obama’s sinking
popularity in polls,
parochial concerns
and the party’s
chronic inability to
unite around a
legislative
initiative, even in
the face of
Republican
opposition.
Some are unhappy
about the specific
types of companies,
particularly the oil
industry, that would
lose tax benefits.
“I have said for
months that I am not
supporting a repeal
of tax cuts for the
oil industry unless
there are other
industries that
contribute,” said
Senator Mary L.
Landrieu of
Louisiana.
A small but vocal
group dislikes the
payroll tax cuts for
employees and small
businesses. “I have
been very
unequivocal,” said
Representative Peter
A. DeFazio, a
Democrat from
Oregon. “No more tax
cuts.”
His voice rising to
a near shriek, he
added: “We have the
economy that tax
cuts give us. And
it’s pretty
pathetic, isn’t it?
The president is in
a box.”
There are also
Democrats, some of
them senators up for
election in 2012,
who oppose the bill
simply for its
mental connection to
the stimulus bill,
which laid at least
part of the
foundation for the
Republican takeover
of the House in
2010.
“I have serious
questions about the
level of spending
President Obama
proposed,” said
Senator Joe Manchin
III, a Democrat from
West Virginia, in a
statement issued
right after Mr.
Obama spoke to a
joint session of
Congress last week.
Mr. Manchin said he
also questioned “the
actual effectiveness
some of these
policies will have
when it comes to
creating jobs and
restoring confidence
in our economy.”
While Mr. Reid, who
is known for trying
to protect Democrats
from casting tough
votes, may be
delaying the bill to
insulate his party,
the White House has
a tacit agreement
with Senate
Democrats that Mr.
Obama be permitted
to take his American
Jobs Act around the
country to try to
sell it to voters.
The White House is
to brief Democratic
senators on the
granular aspects of
the proposal on
Thursday.
As he barnstormed
again on Wednesday,
Mr. Obama told
voters in North
Carolina, “If you
love me, you’ve got
to help me pass this
bill,” but even some
members of Congress
from that state may
prefer to stay just
friends.
Senator Kay Hagan
declined on
Wednesday to say her
support for the bill
Mr. Obama spent the
day promoting in her
state was
indubitable. “We’ve
got to have
legislation
supported by
Democrats and
Republicans,” she
said. “I’m going to
have to look at it.
“
Representative Heath
Shuler, another
North Carolina
Democrat, said
Congress should tame
the deficit before
approving new
spending for job
programs. “The most
important thing is
to get our fiscal
house in order,”
said Mr. Shuler, a
leader of the
fiscally
conservative Blue
Dog Coalition. “Then
we can talk about
other aspects of job
creation.”
Earlier in the week,
David Axelrod, the
president’s top
political adviser,
said in an interview
with “Good Morning
America” the White
House was “not in
negotiation to break
up” Mr. Obama’s
bill, and Congress
would not have an
option for an “à la
carte menu.”
But it is very
likely the bill will
be cherry-picked for
items that appeal to
large swaths on both
sides of the aisle,
such as the payroll
tax cut and a job
training program for
the unemployed.
Senate Democrats
would certainly
relish the idea of
bringing numerous
bills to the floor
to fail — like those
that would benefit
first responders —
potentially
embarrassing the
opposing
Republicans.
However, if
Democrats end up
dumping some of the
more controversial
methods of paying
for the
infrastructure and
other big-ticket
items in the bill —
and most of them
annoy Republicans or
Democrats or both —
either the
administration or
the House and Senate
will still be stuck
finding another way
to pay for them.










