Biden plans Philadelphia swing-state union backdrop for budget proposal
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[March 06, 2023]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden plans to unveil his
upcoming budget proposal to Congress with unusual fanfare on Thursday,
holding a campaign-style event intended to trumpet an economic agenda
imperiled by high inflation and Republican debt limit threats.
Biden plans to roll out the tax-and-spending plans at a Philadelphia
union hall, a venue in a competitive battleground state that will
highlight the president's worker-centric political pitch in the weeks
running up to his expected announcement of a 2024 re-election bid.
"The President will deliver remarks on his plans to invest in America,
continue to lower costs for families, protect and strengthen Social
Security and Medicare, reduce the deficit, and more," the White House
said in a statement.
The main highlight of the proposal for the 2024 fiscal year is a pledge
to cut $2 trillion from the government's deficit over 10 years, and to
extend the life of the Medicare health benefit program by at least two
decades.
Biden is also planning to revive his plans to raise taxes on
billionaires and to fund initiatives like a child tax credit. A proposal
to raise payroll taxes on very high-income people is also on the table.
But Biden is planning to stand by a 2020 campaign pledge not to raise
rates on Americans making less than $400,000 a year.
"On March the 9th, I'm going to lay down in detail every single thing,
every tax that's out there that I'm proposing, and no one ... making
less than $400,000 is going to pay a penny more in taxes," Biden told an
audience in Virginia Beach, Virginia, last week.
"I want to make it clear: I'm gonna raise some taxes," the Democratic
president added.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers
remarks on his economic priorities at a Laborers' International
Union of North America (LiUNA) training center in DeForest,
Wisconsin, U.S. February 8, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
Biden, under pressure from Republicans who are threatening not to
raise the U.S. debt limit unless he agrees to sharp spending cuts,
has challenged Republicans to release their own proposals and to
negotiate over those plans rather than over whether the country
should raise the debt ceiling and pay its existing bills.
An unprecedented U.S. default could halt growth in an economy that
rebounded strongly in terms of output and jobs since the COVID-19
pandemic. Prices, too, have risen to levels that are seen as
politically damaging, and economists worry that efforts led by the
Federal Reserve to tamp down inflation pressures might spark a
recession.
Biden aides regard union backing as well as success in Pennsylvania
as critical to any re-election bid by Biden. Presidential budget
roll-outs in other years are done at the White House and with no
special events drawing attention to them. The venue for Biden's
remarks and his travel to Philadelphia have not previously been
reported.
While Republican lawmakers have not yet fully outlined or voted on
their spending plans for the coming fiscal year, the White House has
nonetheless seized on some past statements and proposals by members
of Congress as evidence that they are hell-bent on unraveling
federal healthcare and old-age programs popular with voters.
Republicans control the House of Representatives while Democrats
control the Senate.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Additional reporting by Jeff Mason
and Andrea Shalal; editing by Diane Craft)
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