White House, Congress under pressure from S&P move

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President Barack Obama hosts a meeting with bipartisan House and Senate Leadership in the Cabinet Room of the White House to discuss the fiscal policy vision the President will later lay out in a speech in Washington April 13, 2011. From left are House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Speaker of the House John Boehner. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

President Barack Obama hosts a meeting with bipartisan House and Senate Leadership in the Cabinet Room of the White House to discuss the fiscal policy vision the President will later lay out in a speech in Washington April 13, 2011. From left are House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Speaker of the House John Boehner.

Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

WASHINGTON | Mon Apr 18, 2011 7:01pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Lawmakers and the White House seized on Standard & Poor's revised U.S. credit outlook on Monday as ammunition for each side in the deficit reduction debate, casting doubt on their ability to get a deal soon.

S&P's move -- changing its outlook on the U.S. rating to negative from stable -- pushed President Barack Obama and Republicans to agree on ways to slash the deficit or face the potential loss of Washington's coveted triple-A credit rating.

Stocks fell and policy makers fretted over the move, but neither Democrats nor Republicans signaled a change that would indicate a breakthrough on spending cuts in the near future.

"It drives home the fact that for all the talk in Washington, there is nothing on the table that is moving," said Sean West, a fiscal policy analyst for investors at the Eurasia Group, referring to the S&P announcement.

Obama and Republican congressional leaders have sparred for weeks over how to tackle the deficit, which is projected to hit $1.4 trillion this fiscal year.

Both sides have unveiled competing plans to bring deficits down to sustainable levels by the end of the decade, but they differ sharply on how to reach those goals.

The White House said Vice President Joe Biden will lead a deficit reduction meeting with members of Congress on May 5, after they return from recess over Passover and Easter.

S&P zeroed in on those differences, saying it saw a risk that Washington would not reach agreement on tackling long-term U.S. fiscal woes by 2013.

"I'm glad they put the warning out," said Joseph Antos, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

"I'm worried that the people who should understand this will have elections on their mind ... and may not want to do what I think is the right thing in the next few months."

The White House, which last week laid out its plan to slash the budget deficit by $4 trillion over 12 years, said the political process would outperform S&P's expectations.

"We simply believe that the prospects (for a deal) are better," said Jay Carney, Obama's spokesman.

"Any call for a bipartisan agreement on deficit reduction, on fiscal reform, is a welcome one. And in that context, I think that (the S&P move) adds to what we believe is some momentum toward that end."

IMMEDIATE BATTLE

While S&P's action added urgency to the deficit debate, it also amplified a more immediate battle over whether Republicans will back Obama's call to raise the debt ceiling.

Representative Eric Cantor, the No. 2 House Republican, called S&P's changed credit outlook "a wake-up call" against those seeking to "blindly increase" the U.S. debt limit.

He said the move made clear that any increase in the debt limit must be accompanied by "meaningful fiscal reforms that immediately reduce federal spending and stop our nation from digging itself further into debt."

U.S. House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said the threatened downgrade showed Democrats and Republicans must "demonstrate our commitment to reducing our deficit through shared responsibility."

Republicans unveiled a plan earlier this month to reduce deficits over the next 10 years by $4.4 trillion by cutting spending and overhauling government-run health programs for the poor and elderly. Democrats slammed the plan.

Polls show Americans are deeply worried about the state of the country's finances, which will be one of the driving issues in the 2012 presidential and congressional elections.

Lawmakers backed by the conservative Tea Party movement, which helped Republicans take control of the House in last year's elections, said S&P's move was an endorsement of their budget-cutting platform.

"It is a vindication of the Tea Party and their stance that we are spending too much," said Republican Representative Blake Farenthold, a member of the House Tea Party Caucus.

The White House, however, pointed to Moody's Investors Service, S&P's main competitor, which said both sides' plans for deficit reduction represent a "potential change in the direction of fiscal policy (that) is credit positive for the U.S. federal government."

(Additional reporting by Andy Sullivan, Thomas Ferraro, Susan Cornwell, Donna Smith, and Steve Holland; Editing by Deborah Charles and Jackie Frank))

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Comments (4)
lhathaway wrote:
These are the same guys who rated NINJA mortgage backed securities as AAA, allowing pensions to invest in them. They are one of the main players who caused the meltdown on in world wide finances. So number one, why aren’t they in jail, and number two, why is anyone paying attention to them. Are they suddenly credible? They made not just a little mistake but a huge error that is still costing us and probably will be costing us for decades to come. There is no excuse and they should be dismantled and silenced. Let someone with some integrity do the ratings, otherwise it’s all just a Wall Street Game.

Apr 18, 2011 5:09pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
DrJJJJ wrote:
Glad to see we’re finally talkin about our monster debt! Did you know that our $14+Trillion dollar debt represents about 25% of TOTAL WORLD debt?? Doesn’t include the $10s of Trillion in IOUs either (unfunded entitlements, massive state problems, housing mess, loan defaults galore,etc!!) Anyone else think we have a moral obligation to the world economy and our kids to do much better?? Greenspan said this weekend big cuts are the key PERIOD! He also said we’ll have to raise taxes too, but the magnitude of the problem requires huge cuts and soon! Which party promises to make bigger cuts-that’s the one to vote for-far from perfect, but the best choice! A vision without a way to pay for it is very dangerous now! Honesty is the best policy-let’s get honest and hurry!

Apr 18, 2011 5:13pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Fishrl wrote:
I can’t use the word I want to use for S&P here. However, they’ve got themselves a bit of a credibility problem after the 2008 crash, for their propensity to rate junk paper as AAA if you pay them enough.

____ ‘em.

Apr 18, 2011 6:45pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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