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Biden shames Republicans for playing down Jan 6 Congress attack

He throws down 2024 gauntlet with populist budget


By AFP
Published : 09 Mar 2023 06:57 PM

US President Joe Biden said Wednesday that Republicans should be ashamed of supporting an effort by Fox News to play down the seriousness of the January 6, 2021 assault on Congress by a mob of Donald Trump supporters. 

"More than 140 officers were injured on Jan 6. I've said before: How dare anyone diminish or deny the hell they went through?" Biden tweeted. "I hope House Republicans feel ashamed for what was done to undermine our law enforcement."

Biden expressed support for the Capitol Hill police, whose chief has accused Fox News presenter Tucker Carlson of manipulating video footage of the unprecedented assault after Trump's election defeat.

In a statement, Capitol Police Chief Thomas Manger said Carlson's show aired this week was "filled with offensive and misleading conclusions."

The January 6 assault saw Trump supporters -- told for weeks by Trump himself that the election was not fair -- smashing their way through police lines and roaming through Congress. The assault forced a pause in the constitutional process of certifying Biden's election victory, while scores of lawmakers fled, fearing for their lives. Recently installed Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy handed over 41,000 hours of raw footage from Capitol security cameras to Carlson, a right-wing firebrand who hosts a hugely popular evening show on Fox. Carlson then edited the footage to support his argument that the crowds were peaceful. Another report adds: President Joe Biden will present what amounts to his expected 2024 reelection pitch Thursday with the unveiling of a proposed budget protecting free health care for the elderly, while taxing wealthy Americans to help slash the national deficit.

The Democrat's speech in Philadelphia will throw down the gauntlet to Republicans. They insist the priority is cutting the deficit without tax raises, but have yet to say what expenses they'd reduce instead.

That standoff is at the heart of a battle of ideas as the country slides toward both a potential crisis over servicing its national debt and the 2024 presidential campaign.

Biden has still not confirmed his reelection bid but the budget rollout is seen as one more step in the build-up to an announcement.

Because Congress, currently split between Democratic and Republican control, has power over federal taxes and spending, the annual ritual of the White House budget unveiling is more a wish list or policy guide than anything else.

"A budget is a statement of values," Biden said on Twitter.

Main points already teased include a pledge Wednesday from the White House to cut the ballooning federal deficit by $3 trillion over the next decade, in part by raising taxes on the wealthy and corporations.

Previously, Biden said he was aiming for a $2 trillion reduction.

At the heart of his proposals will also be a plan to raise taxes on those earning more than $400,000 a year to ensure that Medicare -- the government-funded health care system for people over 65 -- remains solvent.

Hiking the Medicare tax from 3.8 to 5 percent for those wealthy individuals would ensure the program's viability "beyond 2050 without cutting a penny in benefits," Biden said earlier this week.

Republicans have rejected voting for any tax increases, saying Biden is pushing out-of-control spending and anti-business policies.

However, Biden's gambit is that by laying out a deficit cutting plan funded by the very wealthy he will win broad support, while being able to paint his Republican opponents as out of touch.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Biden's plan is to make "the wealthy and big corporations pay their fair share, without raising taxes on Americans" earning less than $400,000 a year.

The Republicans, however, will add to the deficit "with handouts to the rich, big corporations and special interest groups," she said.

In Biden's election-ready populist vision, the wealthy are currently getting a free ride, while the struggling middle class just needs a "little bit of breathing room." But the battle over narratives is far from just academic. The US Treasury has effectively already run out of money for this year -- and urgently needs Congress to approve taking on extra debt or risk plunging the economy into crisis. The previously approved $31.4 trillion borrowing ceiling maxed out in January. If the borrowing limit is not increased or suspended before current emergency measures expire, then the US government could default on its obligations for the first time.

That doomsday scenario could kick in as early as July, the Congressional Budget Office said in February.

Republicans say the ever-growing federal debt points to the need for slashing spending, but Democrats say Republicans are using the issue as a way to weaken Medicare and other long-popular programs.