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Biden, McCarthy face serious time crunch to reach debt ceiling deal

  
Via:  Nerm_L  •  last year  •  11 comments

By:   Alexandra Hutzler (ABC News)

Biden, McCarthy face serious time crunch to reach debt ceiling deal
The House and Senate each have roughly a dozen working days left before Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's June 1 default warning.

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Biden will  be out of the country for a week.  The Senate will be taking a week recess without having done anything.  Chuck Schumer will waste some of the available time on public hearings on the House bill trying to influence public opinion.  And it's all Republicans' fault?

The Republican House has passed a bill to address the debt limit.  They've done the job they were elected to do.  It's the Democratic Senate and Joe Biden who aren't doing their jobs they were elected to do.  And it's all Republicans' fault?

BTW, finally reaching the debt limit doesn't mean the Federal government will default on debt.  What it means is that government spending must be redirected to servicing the debt.  The requirement to service the Federal debt will force Biden to shut down portions of the government and redirect the money.  Exceeding the debt limit means spending cuts are unavoidable.  And that's Republicans' fault, too?


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


Lawmakers are staring down a fast-approaching deadline to raise the debt ceiling or risk default as early as June 1, but the timeline to reach a solution is actually much shorter.

Memorial Day recess for the House and Senate and President Joe Biden's upcoming travel shrink the number of working days for lawmakers to come to a debt ceiling deal by June, which is when Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned the federal government could become unable to pay all of its bills on time.

Yellen, whose estimate relied on the most recent data, wrote she could not definitively say when the so-called "X-date" for default would begin.

In total, according to tentative House and Senate calendars, both chambers will be in session at the same time for just eight days before the end of May.

"Time is of the essence," said Shai Akabas, the director of economic policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center. "The clock is ticking."

The House and Senate each have roughly a dozen working days before the end of May. Though the schedules are subject to change, the House is set to be out of town starting May 26 and will return on June 5, while the Senate will be away from May 22 to May 29.

Complicating the issue further is Biden's schedule: the president is traveling to Japan for a meeting with G-7 leaders from May 19 to May 21, followed by a trip to Australia for the Quad Leaders' Summit on May 24.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre deflected when asked last week if Biden would change his itinerary for the debt ceiling showdown as he did as vice president in 2011, stating she had no changes to share at the time.

On Tuesday, Biden and top congressional leaders will gather at the White House for debt ceiling talks. It will be the first meeting between House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and Biden on the issue since February.

Since then, House Republicans narrowly passed a bill to raise the debt ceiling for one year while also enacting steep government spending cuts. The White House and Democrats, meanwhile, continue to demand a clean debt ceiling increase not tied to federal spending.

"There have been some small steps in the past week or so with the passage of the House legislation and the invitation of the congressional leaders to the White House," said Akabas. "But we're still in the early stages of these discussions. So there's a lot that remains to be done, and not that much time. We need to see an acceleration in these activities."

Ahead of Tuesday's meeting, the two parties still appeared adamantly opposed on who bears responsibility for addressing the debt ceiling.

Biden on Friday slammed "MAGA Republicans" for what he called a "manufactured crisis" on the debt ceiling.

"Let's get it straight. They're trying to hold the debt hostage to us to agree to some draconian cuts, magnificently difficult and damaging cuts," he said, arguing the 2024 budget and the debt ceiling are two unrelated issues.

McCarthy, in response to Yellen's warning about a possible June 1 default, was resolved House Republicans "did their job" when they passed the Limit, Save, Grow Act.

"After three months of the Biden administration's inaction, the House acted, and there is a bill sitting in the Senate as we speak that would put the risk of default to rest," McCarthy said. "The Senate and the President need to get to work -- and soon."

Americans, too, are divided on who they would blame for a default. A new ABC News/Washington Post poll found 39% would mainly blame the Republicans in Congress, while 36% said they'd mainly blame Biden and 16% would blame both parties equally.

Last week, Office of Management and Budget Director Shalanda Young signaled the White House would be open to a short-term fix on the debt limit.

"The important thing to do is to make sure we do this and leave the drama behind, regardless of what length we end up in," Young said.

Young echoed other administration officials who've sounded the alarm on the potential political and financial risks of a default.

Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines testified last week that U.S. adversaries like China and Russia could seize on a default, and economists have painted a grim picture for Americans' pocketbooks if the U.S. were unable to pay bondholders and other bills.

"Of course, we're concerned," Young said. "We're calling on the reasonable people in this town to do the right thing."


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Nerm_L
Professor Expert
1  seeder  Nerm_L    last year

Never underestimate Joe Biden's talent for screwing up.  Kevin McCarthy is wasting his time negotiating with Biden.  No matter what happens, Republicans are going to get their spending cuts either by the Senate agreeing or by exceeding the debt limit.

For Biden it is more important to go out for sushi than do the country's business.  For Schumer it is more important to direct a political show than do the country's business.  Like or not, Republicans aren't involved in the choices Democrats are making. 

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
2  Jeremy Retired in NC    last year

The house passed their bill for the debt ceiling situation.  It's all on the Senate and Geriatric Joe now. 

If this is so important why do we have Biden traveling to Japan to embarrass us even more and the Senate in recess?

 
 
 
Nerm_L
Professor Expert
2.1  seeder  Nerm_L  replied to  Jeremy Retired in NC @2    last year
The house passed their bill for the debt ceiling situation.  It's all on the Senate and Geriatric Joe now. 

You'd never know it from news reporting.  It's as if the House doesn't exist.

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
2.1.1  Jeremy Retired in NC  replied to  Nerm_L @2.1    last year

And we are told they aren't bias.

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Senior Guide
3  Right Down the Center    last year

"Of course, we're concerned," Young said. "We're calling on the reasonable people in this town to do the right thing."

 Reasonable people in DC? We are fucked

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Senior Guide
4  Right Down the Center    last year

"Let's get it straight. They're trying to hold the debt hostage to us to agree to some draconian cuts, magnificently difficult and damaging cuts," he said, arguing the 2024 budget and the debt ceiling are two unrelated issues.

No Joe, they are very related.  

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
5  JBB    last year

Biden only has to let McCarthy drive the world's economy off a cliff, like the last and time before!

Democrats dont negotiate with econo-terrorists.

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
5.1  Texan1211  replied to  JBB @5    last year
Biden only has to let McCarthy drive the world's economy off a cliff, like the last and time before!

McCarthy passed a bill Democrats figured he couldn't pass.

The ball is in the Democrats' court, lets see how they manage to fuck it up now.

Democrats dont negotiate with econo-terrorists.

Many Democrats are way over the top and ignorant in some of the things they think.

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
5.2  Jeremy Retired in NC  replied to  JBB @5    last year
Biden only has to let McCarthy drive the world's economy off a cliff,

It's all on the Democrats now.  Did you forget that the House passed a bill on this.  Now it's on the senate and Geriatric Joe to avert default.  

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Senior Guide
5.3  Right Down the Center  replied to  JBB @5    last year
Democrats dont negotiate with econo-terrorists.

Maybe they should kidnap a basketball player that checks a few boxes.  It seems Joe negotiates with terrorists if they kidnap someone.

 
 
 
Nerm_L
Professor Expert
5.4  seeder  Nerm_L  replied to  JBB @5    last year
Biden only has to let McCarthy drive the world's economy off a cliff, like the last and time before! Democrats dont negotiate with econo-terrorists.

Biden cannot raise the debt limit.  Period.  Only Congress can raise the debt limit.  And the House has passed a bill to raise the debt limit.  The full faith and credit of the Federal government rests in Chuck Schumer's hands.  Whatever happens depends entirely upon what Chuck Schumer chooses to do.

The only choice Biden has is to either default on the Federal debt in violation of Constitutional requirements or shut down portions of the government to redirect money toward servicing the debt.  The Federal government continues to collect tax revenue and the Constitutional requirement is that servicing the debt takes priority.  Biden choosing to default in violation of Constitutional requirements would be an impeachable offense. 

The longer Democrats dawdle, the more likely Federal spending will be cut.  So, Democrats' incompetence will end up giving Republicans what they want anyway.

 
 

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