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The obvious
-- and perhaps only -- way to get an agreement this year is for a one- or two-year extension of all the tax cuts. The incoming Congress and Obama would then have plenty of time to sort it out later. "There's bipartisan opposition to raising taxes on anybody," said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. "What I hope we'll do is come together ... and agree to extend the current tax policy for everyone." McConnell spokesman Don Stewart said the Republican Senate leader is amenable to a two-year extension. Gibbs reiterated that Obama won't go along with a permanent extension of the upper-bracket tax cuts, which would cost about $700 billion over the upcoming decade. "Making those tax cuts for the upper end permanent is something that the president does not believe is a good idea," Gibbs said. Failing to extend the Bush-era tax cuts wouldn't affect next year's filing season but employers would have to withhold more money from workers' paychecks.
[Associated
Press;
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