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Congress clears way for second half of bailout


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  Congress backs Obama with $825 billion stimulus bill
Jan. 15: President-elect Barack Obama breathed a brief sigh of relief after passing his first major political test as the House unveiled Obama's economic stimulus plan. NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

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In all, the outline called for $550 billion in new spending and $275 billion in tax cuts. And the $825 billion total is virtually certain to grow as the legislation advances through Congress.

Initial Republican reaction was negative — and played on Obama’s popularity to make a point.

“At first glance, it appears that my Democratic colleagues think they can borrow and spend their way back to prosperity with a half-trillion dollars of new spending and less tax relief than President-elect Obama has been talking about,” said Republican Rep. John Boehner of Ohio, the party’s leader in the House.

Democrats hold expanded majorities in both houses as the result of last fall’s elections, and enactment of the stimulus measure is scarcely in doubt.

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At the same time, lawmakers made clear they will not hesitate to substitute their own priorities for Obama’s.

The president-elect’s call for a business tax credit for each new job created was jettisoned by Democrats who questioned its value and preferred to use the money elsewhere. They agreed to Obama’s separate proposal for a tax cut of $500 per worker and $1,000 per working couple. The documents made public did not say whether the money would come in the form of a one-time check or an adjustment in paycheck withholding.

The measure does not include money to help middle- to upper-income taxpayers ensnared in the alternative minimum tax, which was originally designed to prevent the extremely wealthy from avoiding payment of taxes but now threatens more than 20 million tax filers.

Several officials said the Senate was likely to include that provision in its version of the bill, a step that could push the overall total close to $900 billion.

Money for the financial bailout was a tougher sell by far.

Several newly elected Democrats campaigned as opponents of the program, which was launched last fall with an initial $350 billion, and lawmakers in both parties have expressed unhappiness with the Bush administration’s management of the effort.

Obama lobbied Democrats in private earlier in the week not to stand in the way of release of the remaining $350 billion, and a top aide followed up with a written commitment to Reid.

In it, Lawrence H. Summers, pledged that $50 billion to $100 billion would be dedicated to a “sweeping foreclosure mitigation plan for responsible homeowners.”

In search of Republican support, Summers also said that apart from a commitment to help the Big 3 automakers survive, the new administration did not intend to intervene financially in individual industries outside the financial sector.

The stimulus measure, meanwhile, encompassed a bewildering array of programs, from money to make broadband available in rural areas to support for scientific, biomedical and climate change research.

It also proposed an increase in Pell Grants for college students of $500, and would forgive repayment of a $7,500 tax credit that Congress passed last year as a loan for first-time homeowners.

Another $50 million would be spent “to put people to work making monument and memorial repairs at cemeteries for American heroes,” according to an information sheet distributed by Democrats.

The summary claimed “unprecedented accountability” and said the bill would include no earmarks, the pet projects that lawmakers are fond of promoting.

In addition, Democrats said all announcements of contract and grant competition would be posted on a Web site to be created by the new administration.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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