Posted on 05/11/2014 8:11:56 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
Scores of Democrats rebuffed the White House and their own leadership on Friday, voting for a bill to permanently extend a tax cut encouraging companies to invest in research and development.
The vote passed 274-131, with 62 Democrats breaking with their party to vote with all but one Republican to pass the bill.
President Barack Obamas administration and House Democratic leaders had panned the bill because it does not offset the cost of the tax credits. The administration issued a veto threat earlier this week.
The defections are particularly striking because at a private meeting immediately preceding the vote, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California, Minority Whip Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, Assistant Leader James E. Clyburn of South Carolina and Budget ranking member Chris Van Hollen of Maryland sharply admonished Democrats planning to vote for the bill.
Voting yes, they argued, sets a precedent for a half-dozen more tax extenders Republicans plan to bring to the floor without offsets, and the budget cuts needed to pay for them will ostensibly come from Democratic priorities.
Aides present at the closed-door meeting Friday said Pelosi had particularly harsh words for her colleagues inclined to defect at one point questioning their integrity, according to a source in the meeting.
This totally undermines any claim of fiscal rectitude. It is such a fraud, Hoyer told CQ Roll Call after the meeting. I talked to some members who said, Well Im for the R&D tax credit. Well Im for it too, but Im for fiscal responsibility.
Pelosi, Hoyer and other Democratic leaders, citing the R&D vote, have argued that if Republicans can pass the tax credit without offsetting it with cuts elsewhere in the budget, they should do so with a long-term unemployment insurance as well.
Republicans have countered that the tax credit has been extended on a short-term basis for decades without being offset, so to ask for offsets now flies in the face of precedent.
The 62 Democrats who voted yes represent a wide swath of the caucus political spectrum, from moderate-minded freshmen to typically reliable party-liners like John B. Larson of Connecticut and Earl Blumenauer of Oregon.....
“but Im for fiscal responsibility” so says Steny Hoyer
Who could have possibly guessed.
It is to laugh! I wonder which aide came up with that argument for her since she hasn't a clue as to what the meaning of integrity is.
The vote passed 274-131, with 62 Democrats breaking with their party to vote with all but one Republican to pass the bill.
Must be an election year...
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