Bill Clinton calls President Obama’s deficit plan ‘confusing,’ slams tax raises

If Barack Obama is going to turn around the nation's economy, he'd better avoid raising taxes, former President Bill Clinton warned this week.

"I personally don't believe we ought to be raising taxes or cutting spending until we get this economy off the ground," Clinton told the conservative site Newsmax. "If we cut government spending, which I normally would be very inclined to do when the deficit's this big, with interest rates already near zero you can't get the benefits out of it.

Clinton said Obama "didn't propose any new taxes" in his speech Monday to unveil his deficit reduction plan. "The speech was $250 billion in tax cuts, $250 billion in spending over a period of two to three years," Clinton said. "It focused mostly on a rather innovative set of payroll tax cuts and incentives to hire people."

Though Clinton didn't cast the president's proposal as a tax increase, Republicans jumped on Clinton's assessment Wednesday to bolster their opposition to the president's plan, which includes the elimination of tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans under what the administration calls the "Buffett Rule." A blog for House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) on Wednesday touted the interview under the headline "Clinton: No Tax Hikes, No New Regulations"

"And look who else is coming out against President Obama's plan," Brian Walsh, National Republican Senatorial Committee Communications Director, wrote in a blast email touting Politico's coverage of the Newsmax interview.

"Former President Bill Clinton says now is not the time to hike taxes: http://is.gd/J2UVz2 #demsindisarray" the Republican National Committee tweeted.

Overall, Clinton told Newsmax that he believes the president's plan is "a little confusing" and hopes Republicans and Democrats can reach a bipartisan deal that begins with payroll tax cuts, which he says yield the biggest returns:

What I would like to say to the president and Speaker [John] Boehner is, O.K., you both have your deal. Go work it out. Meanwhile focus on putting American back to work because it just confused Americans. Americans lost the fact that whatever you feel about this millionaire surcharge, it won't solve the problem.

Clinton supports removing tax breaks for the wealthiest, and said Monday that Republicans shouldn't be speaking for the high-income earners. "It's an insult to those people," Clinton said on NBC's Today Show. "They don't mind being asked to pay their fair share."