This editorial appeared in Wednesday’s Washington Post:
Having denounced as “silliness” President Obama’s plan for a budget deal to avoid the “fiscal cliff,” House Speaker John A. Boehner, R-Ohio, has countered with a proposal of his own. It didn’t take long for Mr. Obama to shoot it down: “Still out of balance” was his dismissive description in an interview Tuesday with Bloomberg TV. A Republican concession on higher tax rates for the top 2 percent of earners is still the president’s sine qua non for a deal; Republicans “will not agree to” that, Mr. Boehner and his fellow House leaders insisted Monday in a letter to Mr. Obama.
So we’re headed for $600 billion worth of tax increases and federal spending cuts next month, right? Certainly the political rhetoric is not encouraging. Nor is the substance of Mr. Boehner’s counteroffer. On taxes, the speaker promised to raise $800 billion over 10 years — but only by eliminating “special-interest loopholes and deductions,” which he refused to name.
Mr. Boehner would cut $600 billion in medical entitlement spending, $300 billion in other entitlements and $300 billion in discretionary outlays — numbers that he suggested are based on ideas raised in congressional testimony a year ago by Erskine Bowles, a former co-chair of the national deficit reduction commission. The reference to Mr. Bowles’ recommendation also would imply applying a new inflation adjustment to federal taxes and benefits, yielding $200 billion in savings, and a gradual increase in the Medicare eligibility age. There were few specifics otherwise.
Still, Mr. Boehner has publicly put his name on something that can loosely be called a plan. His letter to the president is the first time we know of that he has committed, publicly — as opposed to behind closed doors in last year’s abortive debt-reduction talks — to raising taxes, not just raising revenue through economic growth. This is progress — forced by the GOP’s election defeat in November and the White House’s subsequent pounding on Republicans over their refusal to demand more taxes from upper-income Americans.