Under Senate rules, tax
cuts inserted into budget legislation must receive 60 votes to become
permanent. Otherwise, the breaks must expire after 10 years.
Passed 58 to 33, the 2001 the tax cuts received the support of a dozen
Senate Democrats, while Republicans Sens. John McCain of
Arizona and Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island opposed them.
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Asked
about Mr. Hoyer's claim that Republicans are to blame for the impending
tax increase, J.D. Foster, a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation,
a conservative-leaning think tank, said, "This is the kind of
intentionally confusing rhetoric Washington specializes in."
Mr. Bush "proposed [tax cuts] to be permanent. In every budget he
offered, they were to be permanent," Mr. Foster said. "I just have to
wonder what planet [Mr. Hoyer] is on." [Full]
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