What election? Hours after President Obama won his hard-fought bid for re-election, the focus in Washington shifted towards the next big battle.
Speaker of the House John Boehner held a press conference on Wednesday to address the looming fiscal cliff on January 1, when automatic tax rate increases and dramatic cuts to domestic programs and defense will take effect.
The top Republican offered a more conciliatory tone, saying his message was “not one of confrontation but one of conviction” and and suggested all parties look for “common ground where it exists and seize it.” But Boehner’s offering of “new revenue if comes from growth and reform” doesn’t suggest that Republicans in Congress have found “common ground” with Democrats and a triumphant president who campaigned on returning to the Clinton-era tax rates for the top income earners.
The president has already vowed to veto any extension of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy.
President Obama and GOP lawmakers have until the end of December to reach an agreement to avert the fiscal cliff. But with all the Bush tax cuts set to expire on January 1, the Democrats appear to have the leverage.









