From NYTimes.com:
President-elect Barack Obama plans to  include about $300 billion in tax cuts for workers and businesses in  his economic recovery program as he seeks to win over Congressional  skeptics worried that he was too focused on government spending, advisers  said Sunday.
The legislation Mr. Obama’s team is  developing with Congressional Democrats will devote about 40 percent  of the cost to tax cuts, including his centerpiece campaign promise  to provide credits up to $500 for most workers, costing roughly $150  billion. The package will also include more than $100 billion in tax  incentives for businesses to create jobs and invest in equipment or  factories.
The overall package, of $675 billion  to $775 billion, is taking shape as Mr. Obama arrived in Washington  and planned to begin trying to build support in Congress and among the  broader public for his approach to stimulating the economy. Mr. Obama,  who flew to the capital Sunday to join his family in a hotel suite while  awaiting his inauguration, planned to meet with Congressional leaders  on Monday and deliver a speech on Thursday laying the ground for his  emerging economic program.
Although some tax cuts were always expected  to be included in Mr. Obama’s economic package, his team disclosed  the scope and some details of the plans Sunday at a time when Republicans  have begun voicing criticism of what they describe as an open-checkbook  approach to spending. By focusing more attention on the tax cuts in  the plan, Obama aides hope to frame it as a balanced, pragmatic approach.
 
