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"We've made progress, and I believe that greater progress is within sight, but I don't want to fool anybody. We still have to work through some real differences," the president said. Obama's tone was less partisan than at a news conference last week, as were the responses from Capitol Hill Republicans. "I'm pleased the president stated today that we need to address the big, long-term challenges facing our country," Boehner said in a statement. Obama said Republican and Democratic leaders from the House and Senate were invited to meet on the issue Thursday at the White House. That would bring the top eight lawmakers together with Obama, Biden and top administration financial officials. "It's my hope that everybody's going to leave their ultimatums at the door, that we'll all leave our political rhetoric at the door," Obama said. In the Senate on Tuesday, Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., postponed a test vote on a Libya resolution amid increasing opposition from Republican lawmakers who insisted they should be working on financial security, not national security. Several Republican senators had indicated they would oppose using the week to debate the Libya measure. Reid replaced the Libya measure with a nonbinding resolution calling on millionaires to pay a bigger share of the sacrifices needed to wrestle the deficit under control
-- hardly a move that would eclipse any progress made at the White House.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
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