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Fiscal Cliff Avoided by Late Night Vote

Congressman Mike Fitzpatrick voted for the deal, which maintains income tax rates for people making less than $400,000 and couples earning less than $450,000 a year.

 

After months of negotiating, arguing and handwringing, the United States avoided tumbling over the dreaded fiscal cliff Tuesday night when the House of Representatives passed the Senate proposal by a 257-167 vote, CNN reports.

After House Speaker John Boehner spiked an idea to re-open the Senate deal to add more spending cuts, Congress approved the measure with 172 votes from Democrats and 85 from Republicans, including Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick (PA-8).

"In August 2012, I voted to extend tax rates and other tax provisions for all taxpayers - a measure which the Senate refused to take up," said Fitzpatrick in a statement released by his office.

"Throughout the fiscal cliff debate, my number one priority has been to maintain the lowest rates possible for the greatest number of taxpayers. My vote tonight makes lower taxes permanent for 99 percent of taxpayers."

With the new deal, the Bush-era income tax rates for individuals making less than $400,000 and couples making less than $450,000 have been made permanent.

Salaries above that threshold have been raised from 35 percent to 39.6 percent, matching the rates from the Clinton Administration.

However, the Social Security payroll tax will rise from 4.2 percent to 6.2 percent. CNN reports that Americans making $30,000 per year will now take home about $50 less per month.

Other specifics of the deal, according to a White House fact sheet, include:

  • Emergency unemployment insurance benefits are extended for 2 million people.
  • The deal extends expansions of the Child Tax Credit, Earned Income Tax Credit, and the American Opportunity Tax Credit, for parents paying for their children's college tuition.
  • The inheritance tax increases from 35 percent to 40 percent on estates worth $5 million or more.
  • A cap has been placed on itemized deductions for individuals making $250,000 and couples making $300,000 a year.
  • The deal extends the farm bill through the end of the fiscal year, averting a sharp rise in milk prices at the beginning of 2013.  

The White House estimates that the new deal will generate $620 billion in revenue over the next 10 years, but the Congressional Budget Office notes that it also adds almost $4 trillion to the federal deficit, compared to what would have happened if no action had been taken.

Technically, the country went over the cliff on Jan. 1. If Congress had failed to act, the Bush tax cuts would have permanently expired, raising taxes by more than $500 billion in 2013. An automatic $109 billion in cuts to defense and domestic spending also was scheduled to trigger on Wednesday. That budget sequester, part of last year's debt ceiling agreement, has been postponed for two months.

Related Topics: Budget, Congress, Obama, Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick, and fiscal cliff

Mike Shortall

12:25 am on Thursday, January 3, 2013

Yippee skippee .... Another $4 trillion in additional spending, everyone's taxes go up with the rollback of the 2% Social Security Tax rate cut from 2010. And there's not a single dollar of spending cuts to be found anywhere in this "deal"!

Now all we have to do is sit tight waiting for the costs of Obamacare to start hitting the Middle Class. Oh ... By the way, the President proclaimed that he expects additional revenues next year as well.

Can you guess where they will be coming from? Take a good look at your Schedule A deductions for 2012. You may never see some of them again! And still not a word about fiscal restraint on the spending side ...

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wheezer96

7:18 am on Thursday, January 3, 2013

You are right Mike. I'm gonna retire hopefully soon, but it's the young people who voted for the moron who will suffer more. There is no plan for their future. The buffoon and the moron will be long gone when the younbg voters learn that there is no social security and no health care for them - medicare is already being decimated. But this is a free country. People voted for higher taxes, high gasoline prices and high unemployment. They deserve what they get.

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Dogman

12:54 pm on Thursday, January 3, 2013

The deal doesn't add 4 Trillion in spending. It adds 4 Trillion to the deficit, over 10 years, compared to current law which would have seen tax rates (income) rise for everyone. This is a stop gap measure that was all that could be achieved since Boehner has so little control over his caucus.

Jeff W

9:30 am on Thursday, January 3, 2013

Well, if these tax rates were OK during the Clinton era (which we are relentlessly told), then how about going back to the spending levels of that era; I would prefer in real $s, but would accept even the same % of GDP spending. Either one would be WAY less spending than now (excuse me, "investment"). Seems like we are heading for a "government bubble", similar to the housing bubble in which people used their houses as ATMs to fund an unsustainable lifestyle assuming ever rising housing prices. That didn't work, and with the increasing tax and regulatory burdens imposed maintaining government, revenues will fall off as economic growth is limited by these burdens. The goose is almost out of golden eggs. Then what do we do, eat the goose?
Poverty is the natural state of man - it takes no effort to achieve. Creation of wealth requires people to act in a way that serves others and the common good as well as themselves. The wealth creators WILL react to this situation, in ways that Obama, legislators, and bureaucrats cannot foresee but will certainly stigmatize when they don't get the revenue they hoped for.

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Dogman

5:52 pm on Thursday, January 3, 2013

Ask and ye shall receive. Spending as a percentage of GDP has gone down and is projected to further decrease.
http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/us_20th_century_chart.html

Bill Sams

9:59 am on Thursday, January 3, 2013

The Real answer here is that The Alien President has Won. The People of the United States Did this to Themselves. What Next, Obama's Hitler Camps?////
Good Bye America

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Dogman

12:55 pm on Thursday, January 3, 2013

Good Bye. Don't let the door hit you on the way out.

Jona franklin

10:16 am on Thursday, January 3, 2013

I'm lpoking forward to using this next 3 and 3/4 years to educate and encourage people to develop critical thinking skills, math, budget and economy and the constitution....... And then, if enough of us embark on this kind of endeavor, next election can be a turn around ! Gods grace and mercy for us all

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Bill Sams

1:48 pm on Thursday, January 3, 2013

I Hope You are right. The next 4 years is a Test for everyone. I guess since we can't do anything about it, we will have to grin and bear it

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