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Obama, congressional leaders to meet Friday on budget impasse

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Senators expressed little optimism a deal was possible, though they expected to remain in town over the weekend and some said an agreement could still be produced in the final days.

“Virtually every member of the Senate and the president have seen this new movie on Lincoln,” said Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Ohio. “The lesson of that movie is to get hard things done. The president has to decide he wants to get them done.”

On a conference call with GOP members, Boehner again sought to pressure the Senate to take the lead in avoiding the cliff. The speaker’s own efforts to rally his Republican majority around a plan fell apart last week, when he could not get votes for a proposal that would have allowed taxes on income of more than $1 million to rise, leaving cuts for lower incomes intact.

Boehner said bluntly Thursday that he would not bend to Democratic pressure to let the House vote on the president’s preferred solution, which allows taxes to rise on income of more than $250,000 for couples and $200,000 for individuals. The bill might be able to pass largely with Democratic support, but that would put the speaker in the politically awkward position of allowing legislation out of the chamber without the support of his majority.

Boehner, whose re-election as speaker is set for next week, appeared unwilling to take that risk.

“I’m not interested in passing a bill with mainly Democratic votes,” he told members, according to someone who was on the conference call but not authorized to discuss the private talk.

The Senate, which is run by Democrats, is now likely to determine the outcome. Under Senate rules McConnell has the ability to hold up any legislation, but he could also allow the Senate to vote on an alternative proposal from Democrats that might appeal to some Republicans even though it still hews to Obama’s priorities, including an extension of long-term unemployment benefits that Democrats want.

“Hopefully there’s still time for an agreement of some kind,” McConnell said on the Senate floor.

Democrats, though, have shown little interest in more negotiations over Republican demands, especially for steep domestic spending cuts like those considered under a broader deficit-reduction deal.

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