Top American CEOs struck a congenial tone following a Wednesday meeting with President Obama ahead of the resumption of negotiations with Congress over the country’s looming “fiscal cliff.”
Aetna President Mark Bertolini, who attended the meeting, told The Daily Rundown’s Chuck Todd that the president listened to the concerns of the business leaders who have for months watched Congress drag its feet on reaching a deal while waiting for the outcome of the election.
Bertolini said the president did not draw a “line in the sand” on fiscal negotiations.
“There was a support for revenue increases,” Bertolini added. “How we get there is yet to be determined.”
President Obama left little wiggle room during the press conference on how he would shore up additional revenue through raising taxes on the wealthiest of Americans. And though both parties have voiced a willingness to work together in crafting a plan prior to the end of the year when the combination of expiring Bush-era tax cuts and massive spending cuts launch the U.S. toward the so-called “fiscal cliff,” many CEOs left the meeting with cautious optimism.
“We were very clear that if we could help him to get to a solution we are absolutely behind him because going over the cliff is not something that any of us in the room could live with,” said Ursula Burns, CEO of Xerox.








