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"Given the roughly $60 billion difference between us, common sense says `halfway' would be an additional $30 billion in cuts," said Brendan Buck, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. "So far, Democrats have offered little more than the status quo." The figures do serve a political purpose though. Republicans get to say they're delivering on a promise to their conservative base, made before last November's elections, to cut $100 billion in federal spending. And Democrats get to look like they're serious about compromising with newly empowered Republicans
-- and about fiscal austerity, too -- at a time of unusual public concern about the deficit. This kabuki dance looks likely to continue as lawmakers face a March 18 deadline to finalize spending for the current fiscal year or face a government shutdown.
[Associated
Press;
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