WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans are showing far more flexibility than their tea party-backed House colleagues as Washington policymakers seek to steer the government away from a first-ever default on its financial obligations.
Many in the Senate GOP are warming to a new bipartisan budget plan that counts on new tax revenues to slash the federal deficit by almost $4 trillion over a decade.
That's even as House Republicans on Tuesday passed a plan that would require big and immediate spending cuts and passage by Congress of an amendment to the Constitution requiring a balanced budget as the price for a $2.4 trillion increase in the government's borrowing authority.
That "cut, cap and balance" plan has drawn a White House veto threat and is a dead duck in the Democratic-controlled Senate.