WASHINGTON – A bipartisan group of governors came to Washington on Tuesday to express concern to the White House and members of Congress about the potential consequences to state budgets in the fiscal cliff negotiations.
The governors are worried both about the possibility a deal may not be reached by year’s end and also that a final accord might rely on cuts to programs states are counting on to keep their own budgets balanced.
While the focus in Washington is on the impasse between President Barack Obama and congressional Republicans on the fate of George W. Bush-era tax rates for the well-off, governors are warily tracking discussions about spending cuts as many are set to present their own budget proposals for the new year.
“We don’t need cuts on the federal level that merely require tax increases on the state level,” Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe, a Democrat, told reporters outside the White House.
A new report from Harvard’s Institute of Politics, the University of Pennsylvania’s Fels Institute of Government and the American Education Foundation noted that grants to states make up 40 percent of discretionary spending in the federal budget, and that state block grants “will be a prime target” for national cuts.
The state leaders, three Republicans and three Democrats, said they came not to support any particular party’s plans but to offer their perspective on the decisions lawmakers face, and to urge a quick resolution that would end uncertainty that has the potential to hurt states and the national economy.
“It has a dramatic impact on our budgets at a very difficult time for us,” said Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, a Republican.
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