l****z 发帖数: 29846 | 1 WASHINGTON — Americans clearly want Washington to solve its looming budget
crisis, and they clearly reject almost every option to do that, according to
a new McClatchy-Marist Poll.
The only option that voters endorse, by a ratio of 3-to-2, is to raise taxes
on the wealthy.
A majority oppose other often-discussed options, including raising taxes on
everyone, cutting Medicaid or Medicare spending, raising the age for
Medicare, or taking away tax deductions for charitable contributions or home
mortgage interest.
The survey helps explain why it’s so difficult for Washington to solve a
problem everyone sees and everyone wants fixed.
President Barack Obama and Republican House Speaker John Boehner met
secretly Sunday but there is still no sign that they’re moving toward a
deal that could win support from both the Democrats who oppose any cuts in
government spending or benefits and from the Republicans who oppose all tax
increases.
“No one is very enamored of anything,” said Lee M. Miringoff, director of
the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion in New York, which conducted
the national survey of registered voted Dec. 4-6 for McClatchy.
Voters do see the fiscal mess of expiring tax cuts and looming spending cuts
as a crisis that needs to be solved.
By 78 percent to 22 percent, they say they’re concerned about it, and by 75
percent to 21 percent, they say it’s more important for government
officials to compromise to find a solution rather than standing on principle
even if it means continued gridlock.
“They think a deal needs to be struck and they think it matters,” said
Miringoff.
The one thing that voters support is letting the Bush tax cuts expire as
scheduled on Dec. 31 – and thus raising taxes – for individual income
above $200,000 and family income above $250,000.
Voters support that 57 percent to 40 percent.
Despite the solid majority in favor, the proposal backed by Obama is the
most divisive, with Democrats supporting it 75 percent to 20 percent, and
Republicans opposing it 68 percent to 30 percent.
If a majority of voters want to raise taxes on higher incomes, they do not
want to raise taxes on everyone.
By 74 percent to 20 percent, they oppose letting the Bush tax cuts expire –
and therefore raising taxes – on all |
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