"Unfortunately, for
the last 10 days, with the House and Congress gone for the Thanksgiving
recess ... much progress hasn't been made," Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, told ABC's "This Week" program.
Still, lawmakers in both the Democratic and repugican
parties have been trying to convince the public - and financial markets -
that they are willing to compromise and can reach a deal before the end
of the year.
Durbin indicated Democrats might accept a reform of the government's Medicare health insurance program for the elderly that would make higher-income seniors pay more for their care.
Democrats
traditionally oppose limiting Medicare benefits according to income, a
practice known as "means testing." Durbin said Medicaid, a public health insurance program for the poor, also could be overhauled.
"We can make meaningful reforms in Medicare and
Medicaid without compromising the integrity of the program, making sure
that the beneficiaries are not paying the price for it, except perhaps
the high-income beneficiaries," Durbin said.
A deadline looms over the talks. Without action by lawmakers and President Barack Obama, roughly $600 billion in tax increases and spending cuts will start to hit households and companies in early January.
The repglicans and
Obama's Democrats are at an impasse over the president's wish to raise
income tax rates on the wealthiest Americans, which repugicans say
would hurt job creation.
The repugicans also want to cut spending on social programs more than Democrats say they will accept.
Still, a growing group of repugican lawmakers
are loosening their ties to Grover Norquist, the anti-tax activist
famous for getting elected officials to sign a pledge that they will
vote against any tax increases.
repugican Senator
Lindsey Graham said repugicans will allow tax revenues to rise as long
as social spending programs are reformed. "I will violate the pledge -
long story short - for the good of the country, only if Democrats will
do entitlement reform," he told "This Week."
Graham said he supported boosting revenues by closing tax loopholes rather than by raising tax rates.
repugican Senator Saxby Chambliss
said last week he "cared more about the country" than a 20-year-old
pledge, and on Sunday repugican Representative Peter King, chairman of
the House Homeland Security Committee, told NBC's "Meet the Press" he
agreed with Chambliss.
Durbin said the
Democrats' will for substantial entitlement reform did not extend to
Social Security, the federal government pension program, which he said
only needs small tweaks to ensure long-term solvency.
"Bring entitlement reform into the conversation. Social Security, set (it) aside," Durbin said.
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