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Super Committee Co-Chair Says Tax Hikes Won’t Happen
Producer
The 12 member congressional “super committee” is still working on a deficit deal, but Co-chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-TX) told Larry Kudlow that "super" tax hikes will not be part of any compromise.
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Bill Clark | Getty Images Joint Deficit Reduction Committee co-chairs Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., conduct the committee's hearing on 'Overview of Previous Debt Proposals' on Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2011 |
“We’re facing a jobs crisis and a debt crisis,” he said. “We’re certainly not going to exacerbate one by trying to address the other. Frankly, that’s one of the reasons we are stymied at the moment.”
Hensarling denied any knowledge of what the Wall Street Journal said was a plan for $300 billion in tax revenues up front and $500 billion in tax revenues later.
“As the co-chairman of the committee, I don’t know what agreement you are talking about," he said. "It certainly hasn’t been presented to me.”
The super committee has until November 23rd to agree on a plan to cut the federal deficit. The legislation that established the panel of six Democrats and six Republicans put in place an enforcement mechanism that will trigger automatic cuts if the committee fails to reach an agreement on $1.2 trillion in deficit cuts over 10 years.
Hensarling told Kudlow Republicans have gone as far as they feel they can go.
“We put $250 billion of what is known as static revenue on the table, but only if we can bring down rates,” he said.
Hensarling believes they can bring down the top individual tax rate to between 28 and 30 percent and the corporate rate to 25 percent.
"On balance, we think that would be pro-growth," he added. "But, listen, any penny of increased static revenue is a step in the wrong direction. We can only balance that with pro-growth reforms. And, frankly, the Democrats have never agreed to that.”
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