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Gov. Tom Wolf has insisted on the tax increase to deliver a record boost in aid to public schools and narrow a long-term budget deficit.
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State House Republicans balking at compromise budget plan

Marc Levy/Associated Press

State House Republicans balking at compromise budget plan

HARRISBURG — Pennsylvania House Republicans revolted Saturday against the latest plan between Gov. Tom Wolf and top lawmakers to break a five-month budget stalemate, leaving two competing plans and any resolution in doubt.

House Republicans emerged from a closed-door meeting in the Capitol to say the majority caucus would not support a multifaceted budget plan their leadership had helped negotiate with the Democratic governor and Senate leaders.

Instead, House Republicans said, consensus had emerged around a smaller spending plan and a smaller tax increase.

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“We’re trying to deliver a budget that we think we can get the votes to pass,” said House GOP Policy Committee Chairman Kerry Benninghoff, R-Centre.

The Senate ar­rived at the Cap­i­tol for a rare Sun­day night ses­sion and proceeded to vote through committee a budget bill that one Republican spokesperson said Mr. Wolf agreed to along with all leg­is­la­tive cau­cuses ex­cept House Re­pub­li­cans.
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The move set up a Sunday afternoon vote in the House Appropriations Committee, just hours before the Senate Appropriations Committee was scheduled to consider a plan that still had support from Mr. Wolf and Senate Republican majority leaders.

Neither the House nor the Senate plan had been made public Saturday night, and it was unclear whether the evolving House GOP plan had the support to pass the full chamber.

Both Mr. Wolf and Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, said they remained committed to a deal that revolved around a $30.7 billion spending plan with a $350 million boost for public schools.

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It also required a $600 million-plus tax increase, although the source of the money remained the subject of debate.

Mr. Wolf has insisted on the tax increase to deliver a record boost in aid to public schools and narrow a long-term budget deficit. As a trade-off, he had agreed to sign legislation sought by Senate Republicans to scale back public pension benefits and by House Republicans to allow private businesses to sell wine or liquor outside the state-controlled system.

On Saturday afternoon, Mr. Wolf urged lawmakers to support the deal he had endorsed along with House and Senate Republican majority leaders.

“Nearly one month ago, Republican leaders agreed to a budget with me that includes the largest increase in education funding — at all levels — in the history of Pennsylvania,” Mr. Wolf said. “It is long past time for the Legislature to move ahead with this agreement and end this impasse.”

Gov. Tom Wolf cautioned today that the budget deal is not final.
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Mr. Corman also said the Senate was sticking to the agreement.

“We just need to keep forging forward and if we have to make tweaks here and there to get it done, we will,” he said.

House Democrats continued to back Mr. Wolf and would oppose the House Republican plan if it did not help meet their goals of wiping out the deficit and Republican-supported funding cuts to schools and human services programs in the last four years.

“If it isn’t going to do that, we’re not for it,” said House Minority Leader Frank Dermody, D-Oakmont.

First Published: December 5, 2015, 11:26 p.m.
Updated: December 6, 2015, 3:55 a.m.

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Gov. Tom Wolf has insisted on the tax increase to deliver a record boost in aid to public schools and narrow a long-term budget deficit.  (Marc Levy/Associated Press)
Marc Levy/Associated Press
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