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As federal cuts near, White House trades blame with Republicans

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On Saturday, Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, a potential GOP presidential candidate, won legislative approval of a transportation plan that includes new taxes on motor fuels and a sales tax increase.

On “Face the Nation,” Republican Gov. Jan Brewer of Arizona did not rule out higher taxes as part of a federal budget deal in Washington.

“We don’t like increasing taxes but, you know, we know we have to be pragmatic. We know there has to be some type of compromise. But dang it, they need to get the job done. They don’t need to leave the public out there hanging,” she said.

But Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, another prospective 2016 Republican presidential candidate, rejected the need for increased taxes.

“My advice to the president is: ‘Stop the campaigning, stop sending out your Cabinet secretaries to scare the American people. Roll up your sleeves and do the hard work of governing,’” Jindal said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

One place where the two sides seemed to find common ground Sunday was in using the word “stupid” in the context of the spending debate.

Pfeiffer, the Obama aide, said that the Republican campaign to blame the White House for initially proposing the automatic cuts was “a fairly stupid one,” since most Republicans in Congress voted for the deal. And Republican Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, who voted against it, said on “Fox News Sunday” that the automatic reductions “are a stupid way to cut spending.”

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