“A pair of congressional Republicans reiterated their willingness Sunday to violate an anti-tax pledge in order to strike a deal on the ‘fiscal cliff,’ echoing Sen. Saxby Chambliss, the Georgia Republican who suggested last week that the oath may be outdated,” the Washington Post reports. “Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) said he was prepared to set aside Grover Norquist’s Taxpayer Protection Pledge if Democrats will make an effort to reform entitlements, and Rep. Peter T. King (R-N.Y.) suggested the pledge may be out of step in the present economy.”
The L.A. Times: “Graham, King depart from Norquist's anti-tax pledge.”
Peter King (R-NY) on Meet the Press: “I agree entirely with Saxby Chambliss. A pledge you signed 20 years ago, 18 years ago, is for that Congress,” King said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” He continued: “For instance, if I were in Congress in 1941, I would have signed a declaration of war against Japan. I’m not going to attack Japan today. The world has changed, and the economic situation is different.”
(By the way, the New York Daily News reports King will be stepping down as chairman of the Homeland Security Committee. (King, a Republican, is giving up the top spot under self-imposed Republican rules that limit members to serving no more than six years as a committee chairman. King already had a waiver to serve a seventh year, which he is now completing.)
But as the L.A. Times also writes: “When Republicans in Congress say they are willing to put tax revenues on the table in budget talks with President Obama, that offer obscures a divide within their ranks that could thwart a year-end fiscal compromise.”
AP: “House Republicans still smarting from their poor showing among Hispanics in the presidential election are planning a vote next week on immigration legislation that would both expand visas for foreign science and technology students and make it easier for those with green cards to bring their immediate families to the U.S.”
“[A]s advocates mobilize for what is likely to be a two-year drive to get an immigration law enacted, their optimism may be tested by a dose of reality,” Reuters writes. “However sympathetic Obama might be, he will be preoccupied with fiscal battles well into next year and less likely to engage in the kind of salesmanship analysts believe is essential to sell broad immigration policy changes to the public.”
“U.S. lawmakers have made little progress in the past 10 days toward a compromise to avoid the harsh tax increases and government spending cuts scheduled for January 1, a senior Democratic senator said on Sunday,” Reuters writes of Dick Durbin’s (D-IL) appearance on a Sunday show.
“Republican Sen. Bob Corker (Tenn.) on Monday touted his proposal for avoiding the ‘fiscal cliff’ and urged lawmakers to ‘rip the band aid off’ and pass a meaningful deficit-reduction package before January,” The Hill writes.
Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said Sunday he could change his mind about Susan Rice becoming secretary of state, but would want to hear from her first.
The L.A. Times says McCain “softens opposition to Rice.”
Meanwhile, in other McCain news: “McCain said on Sunday the GOP needs to embrace a bigger tent and immigration reform - and leave abortion "alone” in the wake of the disappointing 2012 presidential elections,” Politico writes.
Chicago Tribune: “Rep. Jesse L. Jackson Jr. resigned from Congress on Wednesday, saying in a letter that he is cooperating with a federal investigation ‘into my activities’ but blaming his health problems for his decision to step down just two weeks after his reelection. Jackson's letter to House Speaker John A. Boehner was his first acknowledgment of the ongoing corruption inquiry into his alleged misuse of campaign dollars.”


Yay!
Good News!
Moderation may not be dead after all.
Hopefully.
Oh, Grover, your time may be over!
The hope for the Republican Party is that they realize signing pledges to ideologues does nothing but get them in trouble. Their only pledge should be the duty they owe their constituents, not to one very stupid and selfish man.
Now. If they would dump the far right social conservatives that have ruined that party for decades, they may have a chance for survival
I think anyone who signed the pledge should be tried for treason ! Starting with Eric Cantor and Mitch McConnell ,and their pay be stopped and all benefits lost and retirements forfeited ..
One can hope that moderation is the new catch phrase, but I am not wildly optimistic. Republicans created a monster when they embraced the right wing extremists who now control their base and their primary cycles. It is really difficult to dial it down when you have given lunatics the keys to the asylum.
"Republicans created a monster when they embraced the right wing extremists who now control their base and their primary cycles. It is really difficult to dial it down when you have given lunatics the keys to the asylum."
You could say the the same thing about the democrats too... sooo enjoy til we run out of money!!
maxx the moocher When we run out of money we always have yours.
Give us an expmple of a Democrat signing a pledge to a nut like Norquist.
Maxx Moocher
How so? You just don't get it yet DO U?
I've seen how this idiotic pledge has worked on a local level. In Fluvanna County, Virginia, the conservatives were ready all ready to keep a beautiful, brand-new, much needed high school from opening because citizens would have to cough up some coins to do it. Then they wanted to cut the vocational programs, things that would really help kids get jobs.
There are many retired people in my rural community, so they cut back funding for the only bus service into town and reduced the senior center to one day a week and acted as if that was a luxury. Frankly, I can't wait until some of these tightwads get old so they can rely on their unemployed grandkids to take them places.
After the whoopin' they got in November the smart ones in the Republican party are softening the hard line right wing radical position they had. This is what they are having to do in order to save their party from total obliteration. This is a good thing as we need two parties and neither should be extremist. The left leaning extremists got their tails whipped in the 1970s and the party moved toward the center whereupon they began winning elections again. Now if the Republican party moves back toward the center from their extreme right wing controllers they will be able to help govern well and gain much more support. Apparently they have started but the question is will it last or is this just talk so they don't get blamed for the fiscal cliff.