To make his point, Obama was flanked at the White House
by people who said they would be stretched thin financially if Congress
failed to extend the cuts before the end of the year. If no deal is
reached, the White House says a person making $50,000 a year would see a
loss of about $40 per paycheck.
"Now
there may be some folks in the House who refuse to vote for this
compromise because they don't think 40 bucks is a lot of money," Obama
said. "But anyone who knows how to stretch a budget knows that at the
end of the week or the end of the month, $40 can make all the difference
in the world."
In seeking to ratchet up pressure on Republicans
for a deal, Obama reiterated his call for a two-month extension of the
payroll tax cuts, a measure already agreed to by an overwhelming
majority of Senators from both parties. He said the House GOP's refusal
to sign on to the bipartisan deal was exactly why the American people
have grown so frustrated with Washington.
"This
is an issue where an overwhelming number of people in both parties
agree," Obama said. "How can we not get that done? Has this place become
so dysfunctional that even when people agree to things we can't do it?
It doesn't make any sense. Enough is enough."
House
Republicans say they oppose the two-month deal because it doesn't
provide the public and businesses enough certainty They've called on
Obama and Senate Democrats to negotiate a full-year extension instead.
Earlier Thursday, Obama called House Speaker John Boehner
and committed to immediately starting talks on a full-year deal if the
House first passes the two-month extension. Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky., has also urged the House to pass a short-term
extension while starting work on the full-year deal.
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