Republican softens stance on tax rises, saying Americans don't need more stress after school shootings.
Negotiations between the White House and Republicans over a complex package of measures to start narrowing the giant gap between what America spends every year and what it collects in taxes appeared yesterday to have accelerated with both sides offering concessions.
Obstacles still remain and even if the United States Republican Speaker of the House, John Boehner, indeed hammers out a compromise plan with President Barack Obama as early as this week he will still struggle to persuade some members of his own party to vote for it.
Some on his right flank will baulk if it includes tax increases for the rich.
Much is at stake because a failure to reach a deal by January 1 will mean the automatic triggering of an array of painful austerity measures including quite significant tax rises for almost every working American and a raft of painful spending cuts. The chilling effect could be enough to knock the US back into recession.