The Dems spread these types of rumours. The one thing the Dems have learned well under this regime of terror is that the title of the bill is almost all the battle and makes for good press so they can further manipulate the weak (minded).
The Bush (Republican) tax cuts aren't the only thing on the agenda with this bill. The Dems have all kinds of other things in this 2 month interim bill that was put together this way so they could egg the Republicans into not signing so they could have some election year fodder.
For instance were you aware that the bill also includes a surcharge on all FHA, Fannie & Freddie loans to supposedly pay for this tax cut? The tax cut is for 2 months, but the surcharge goes on till 2021. The money just goes into the Treasury under the general fund, not to any specific tax cut or any other specific charge.
Article #1 - "Mortgage Bankers Association CEO David Stevens said the g-fee jump could cost the average borrower another $4,000 in fees over the life of a $200,000 loan."
Article #2 - President Obama, in a press briefing after the vote, urged House Republicans to reconsider the Senate version of the bill. He said legislators would come to an agreement on a tax cut bill, as long as it does not focus on "extraneous issues." Extraneous issues like maybe the almost 75% of Obamacare that had nothing to do with Obamacare? You mean that type of extraneous issues?
Aritcle #3 - "A major difference between these new “guarantee” fees and the historic guarantee fees is that the money generated will be deposited directly in the Treasury. It will be part of the general fund and become available only as directed under future appropriations acts. So, the bill may call them guarantee fess, but they guarantee nothing except that homeowners ultimately will bear this new, non-transparent tax increase. And, the only contributor to the funds will be homeowners or prospective homeowners who have mortgages. Yes, the fees are paid by the lenders, but we know that the fees will be covered ultimately by the overall cost of a mortgage. Unlike property taxes which at least are tied to the community, these taxes stay at the Federal level without any specifically designated use."
The mandated minimum 10 bps increase more than doubles the average upfront guarantee fee that already exists and according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s 2011 guarantee fee. The 10 bps is a 71% increase on the 2010 average fee of 14 bps for on-going fees and occurs during a time when the portfolios are getting stronger and performing better."
"So, one can only conclude the purpose of this new tax is to find yet a new source of funds, provide no transparency in doing so, make the GSE’s less competitive and give the largest lenders a better chance to portfolio loans and create a private market to replace, not just supplement the GSEs’ liquidity role. That may be a supportable objective, but it seems the appropriations process is not the place to introduce it and the clandestine approach violates the committed to “transparency” we hear so much about."
And keep in mind this is only ONE of the "extraneous issues" included in the bill.