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Obama calls more talks to break debt impasse

WASHINGTON (AFP) -- U.S. President Barack Obama convened a second consecutive day of crisis White House talks Monday, but a polarized Washington appeared far from a deal to stave off a catastrophic debt default.

Obama met Sunday evening with congressional leaders, including Republican House Speaker John Boehner, but 75 minutes of talks failed to unblock an impasse that reaches right to the heart of America's ideological divide.

Republicans are refusing to raise the $14.29 trillion U.S. debt limit unless Obama first agrees to curb the ballooning budget deficit, in part by cutting costly government-funded social welfare programs.

The president and Democrats say they are willing to make some cuts to the so-called entitlement programs but want the Republicans to meet them half way by allowing tax hikes for millionaires and billionaires to increase revenue.

The White House said shortly after Sunday's discussions concluded that Obama would meet congressional leaders again on Monday -- at a time to be decided -- after holding a 1500 GMT press conference on the crisis.

Asked as he went into Sunday's talks if the warring politicians would reach a deal in the next 10 days to prevent the U.S. from defaulting on its debt obligations, Obama replied: "We need to."

But statements issued after the talks by the parties' respective Senate leaders, Mitch McConnell for the Republicans, Harry Reid for the Democrats, offered no clue as to how that breakthrough might be achieved.

"It's baffling that the president and his party continue to insist on massive tax hikes in the middle of a jobs crisis while refusing to take significant action on spending reductions at a time of record deficits,"

McConnell said through his spokesman.

"Senator Reid believes the stakes are too high for Republicans to keep taking the easy way out, and he is committed to meeting every day until we forge a deal, however long that takes," his spokesman said.

Meanwhile, a Boehner aide said: "The Speaker restated the fundamental principles that must be met for any increase in the debt limit: spending cuts and reforms that are greater than the amount of the increase, restraints on future spending, and no tax hikes."

Before Sunday's White House meeting, Boehner and McConnell warned they might abandon efforts to reach a larger, comprehensive debt reduction deal because Obama and the Democrats insisted on raising taxes on the wealthy.

The Republican move would leave negotiators aiming at a less ambitious framework, striving to save about $2.4 trillion over the next decade instead of the $4 trillion still sought by the Democrats.

Obama's chief of staff William Daley earlier refused to countenance the idea of a smaller deal saying: "Everyone agrees that a number around $4 trillion is the number that will make a serious dent on our deficit.

"It will send a statement to the world that the U.S. has gotten hold of their fiscal problems and they are moving forward."

The talks are part of a final major push to reach a deal to raise the congressionally determined limit on U.S. borrowing, now set at $14.29 trillion, in the face of a budget deficit expected to hit $1.6 trillion this year.

The U.S. hit the ceiling on May 16 but has since used spending and accounting adjustments, as well as higher-than-expected tax receipts, to continue operating without impact on government obligations.

By August 2, though, the government will have to begin withholding payments to bond holders, civil servants, retirees or government contractors, and the White House has urged a deal by July 22 to have time for Congress to pass it.

Economists warn that if the United States defaults, it could lose its ability to borrow, souring fraught financial relations with creditors like China and sending the already sour global economy into a tailspin.

Boehner faces pressure from Republicans close to the archconservative "Tea Party" movement to reject any compromise that raises taxes, something he has already publicly ruled out.

Obama faces pressure from Democrats outraged he might agree to cuts in the fraying U.S. social safety net, notably to the Medicare health program for the elderly and disabled, and to Social Security retirement benefits.

The discussions are sure to shape Obama's 2012 reelection bid, which will likely turn on voters' assessment of his handling of the economy as it claws its way out of the worst recession since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

On Friday the U.S. Labor Department said the ailing U.S. economy, still digging out from the 2008 global meltdown, had generated a paltry 18,000 jobs in June and the unemployment rate had ticked up to 9.2 percent.

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