White House Ok with Immediate Spending Cuts

At the White House, Carney did not specifically say whether Obama would sign a two-week spending bill, saying he did not want to “get into any specific time frames.”

The cuts proposed by Republicans would come from programs the White House recommended be reduced or terminated in the 2012 fiscal year beginning Oct. 1, and from funds set aside for earmarks.

Republicans were eager to draw attention to an evident lack of unity among Democrats on the issue of federal spending, which figured prominently in elections last fall that gave the GOP control of the House and additional seats in the Senate.

Rep. Peter Roskam, R-Ill., a member of the leadership, said there was evidence of tensions between House and Senate Democrats. “I hope that the Democrats are able to get over their divisions,”‘ he said, adding that Republicans have been united.

Along the same lines, Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., said at a news conference that more senators favor the House’s position on cuts than Reid “may prefer to believe.”‘ Democrats hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate, including two independents. But an unknown number of Democrats advocate immediate spending cuts and appear unwilling to support a short-term spending bill at current levels, as their own leadership prefers.

A short-term bill is needed to give lawmakers time to negotiate a more sweeping measure that would carry the government through to the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30. A $1.2 trillion House-passed bill for that purpose includes $61 billion in cuts as well as provisions to prevent implementation of the new health care law and block federal regulations proposed for several industries.

Obama has threatened a veto, and the measure stands no chance of passage in the Senate. It is unclear how long negotiations on a compromise might take. For their part, some Republicans said during the day they are prepared to pass additional interim measures to keep the government open beyond March 18, as long as they include spending cuts.

Carney said there was a limit to that approach. “`We believe is that if we keep returning to this process every couple of weeks that will be bad for the economy because of the uncertainty it creates and the tension around that,” he said.

(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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