Obama
sketches 2015 agenda of taxes, trade; meets McConnell
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[December 04, 2014]
By Steve Holland and Roberta Rampton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack
Obama on Wednesday laid out a business-friendly legislative agenda for
next year that hinges on whether he and the new Republican Congress can
set aside long-simmering disputes and find common ground.
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Obama also spoke one-on-one in the Oval Office with Republican
Senator Mitch McConnell, whose party routed Democrats in midterm
elections last month and who will become Senate majority leader in
January.
Before that session, Obama told the Business Roundtable, a group of
chief executives of top U.S. businesses, that he would like to
pursue corporate tax reform, free-trade deals and reach agreement on
an immigration overhaul to replace his controversial unilateral
action last month that loosened immigration policies.
Infrastructure, patent reform and cyber security were other areas
Obama held out as possible areas for compromise.
All these items are welcome in the business community, but deep
differences exist between Obama and Republicans on tax reform and
immigration and the president faces opposition from his own
Democrats on free trade.
"The good news, despite the fact that obviously the midterm
elections did not turn out exactly as I had hoped, is that there
remains enormous areas of potential bipartisan action and progress,"
Obama said.
While officials gave no details as to Obama's talks with McConnell,
the two must overcome deep partisan differences to reach accord.
Republicans are still seething at Obama's go-it-alone decision to
allow up to 4.7 million illegal immigrants to remain in the country.
McConnell told the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday that Obama had
veered left since the election.
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“By any objective standard the president got crushed in this
election. So I’ve been perplexed by the reaction since the election,
the sort of in your face dramatic move to the left. I don’t know
what we can expect in terms of reaching bipartisan agreement," he
said.
Obama told CEOs he wants to see discussions on tax reform start
"early" because he said it could take six to nine months to get a
deal.
On immigration, Obama said he thought Republicans would try to "take
a couple of stabs at rolling back" his executive actions before they
grappled with legislation of their own.
But he made it clear to CEOs that he would not favor legislation
that simply dealt with business concerns without addressing the
needs of 11 million undocumented people living in the country.
(Editing by David Gregorio)
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