Anti-tax lobbyist Grover Norquist put on a brave face despite rumblings of “new revenue” in the form of tax hikes to avert the so-called fiscal curb.
The Americans for Tax Reform founder insisted his “pledge” remains rock-solid and that Republican lawmakers will not cave on their promises never to raises taxes. “It’s been 22 years since a Republican voted for a tax increase in this town,” said Norquist, according to a report published Tuesday in The New York Times. “This is not my first rodeo.”
But after the 2012 election, rustling up support may be more difficult. In January, the House will seat 16 incoming Republicans who have not signed on Norquist’s dotted line–that’s up from six with the outgoing Congress.
“People don’t always take the pledge first when they run. A lot take it after they have been there for a while,” Norquist said, defending the drop in new signatures. “The pledge isn’t the only vehicle for stopping tax increases.”
Norquist earned the nickname “most powerful man in Washington who does not sleep in the White House” from msnbc’s Lawrence O’Donnell. His anti-tax pledge has seemed to hold Republican legislators–and a balanced budget deal–hostage. The GOP’s refusal to raise taxes to pay down the deficit doomed President Obama’s search for a budget deal last year.
Exit polling suggested that the majority of voters support Obama’s platform of raising taxes on Americans who earn more than $250,000 per year. And the president has explicitly said that he considers himself to have a mandate to do so.









