Politics | Barack Obama Obama Signals Compromise on Bush Tax Cuts President looks ready to extend all in order to spare middle class By Nick McMaster Posted Dec 6, 2010 3:58 PM CST Copied President Barack Obama gestures while speaking during a visit to Forsyth Technical Community College in Winston-Salem, N.C., Monday, Dec. 6, 2010. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton) Faced with the prospect of no deal on the Bush tax cuts resulting in a middle-class tax hike on Jan. 1, President Obama is signaling a willingness to extend them across the board, reports USA Today. "We've got to find consensus here even if it's not 100% of what I want or what the Republicans want," he said in a speech today. "There’s no reason that ordinary Americans should see their taxes go up next year.” The burgeoning federal deficit "can't afford" to permanently extend the tax cuts to the rich, the president said, but he looks ready to do so temporarily—though Politico notes that the White House has hinted that such a compromise must be tied to the extension of unemployment insurance and other stimuli in the 2009 Recovery Act. Congressional Democrats are meeting today with Obama and Joe Biden to discuss the issue. Read These Next Salesforce CEO's ICE joke leaves employees fuming. He evaded arrest for 16 years, but his luck ran out at the Olympics. She lost to her victim in court, then beat her on the Olympic slopes. Elon Musk responds to the mass exodus at xAI. Report an error