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GOP looks to fight Dems, not negotiate with Obama

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"Cooling your heels for 72 hours or 48 hours while there's some backroom deal going on that cannot be discussed is not exactly why people ran for the Senate," said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., who had unveiled his own 10-year, $4.5 trillion solution for averting the end-of-year fiscal cliff.

What's more, Republican officials have complained that Obama lectured congressional leaders during their meetings, trying to persuade rather than negotiate. White House officials, for their part, complain that Boehner was an uncertain negotiator, never able to guarantee that his party would stand by an agreement.

As Boehner himself confessed last week in a speech to the Republican Ripon Society: "The last two years have been pretty rough." He said newer Republicans lawmakers have come to think of him as "some kind of a squish, ready to sell them out in a heartbeat."

"It really has in fact caused somewhat of breach that I've been in the middle of trying to repair," Boehner said.

While the fight over the government's borrowing limit is now likely to be put off until May, Obama and the Congress still face two upcoming fiscal deadlines that could test this unwillingness for 11th-hour White House negotiations. Tough new spending cuts -- about $85 billion from this year's budget -- are scheduled to kick in on March 1. On March 27, the government faces a potential shutdown if Congress doesn't extend a temporary budget measure.

But at the White House and in Congress, both are seen as far less cataclysmic than failure to raise the nation's debt ceiling. And Republican lawmakers who once shuddered at the idea of massive cuts, especially to defense programs, now see the automatic reductions on March 1 as the only recourse to reduce spending.

"It's the bird in hand when it comes to cuts," said Sen. John Cornyn, the second ranking Republican leader in the Senate.

More unclear is how Republicans intend to deal with the debt ceiling in May, when Congress again will have to act to raise it or extend it.

The White House is no more enthusiastic for last-minute deal making than Republicans are. Fiscal negotiations have been time consuming events that have left Obama with little time to pursue other aspects of his agenda.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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