WASHINGTON -- Lawmakers looking for a way around the year-end budget impasse known as the "fiscal cliff" might get some help from some Minnesota Republicans who are signaling a crack in the long-standing GOP anti-tax pledge.
U.S. Reps. John Kline and Erik Paulsen, both potential Senate candidates in 2014, say they would consider raising new tax revenue by closing "special interest loopholes" in the tax code as part of a deficit deal that significantly cuts spending.
Also signing on to a tax loophole strategy is recently defeated Minnesota Republican Chip Cravaack, whose single term ends after the current lame-duck session of Congress.
The new statements by the three mirror a broader movement among Republicans in Washington seeking a little negotiating room as pressure builds to avoid recessionary budget cuts and tax increases now scheduled to take effect after Dec. 31.
With the deadline looming in 35 days, President Obama started a four-day blitz to promote his plan to raise tax rates on income above $250,000.
Kline and Paulsen both oppose the Democrats' plan to raise tax rates on the wealthy, as do most Republicans in Congress. Both also have been longtime advocates of measures to streamline the tax code.
But any GOP reforms that end taxpayer deductions and credits without compensating tax cuts could be seen as an end run around the anti-tax pledge of influential GOP activist Grover Norquist, founder of Americans for Tax Reform.
Norquist's pledge has dominated budget talks in recent days as several prominent GOP figures have voiced misgivings about a long-standing vow that has been kept by the vast majority of Republicans in Congress.