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Thursday, June 26, 2025

Crucial days ahead as debt ceiling deal goes for vote

...Biden calls law­mak­ers for sup­port

by

758 days ago
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The draft of a bill that President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy of Calif., negotiated to raise the nation's debt ceiling, is photographed Monday, May 29, 2023. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)

The draft of a bill that President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy of Calif., negotiated to raise the nation's debt ceiling, is photographed Monday, May 29, 2023. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)

US Pres­i­dent Joe Biden says he “feels good” about the debt ceil­ing and bud­get deal ne­go­ti­at­ed with House Speak­er Kevin Mc­Carthy as the White House and con­gres­sion­al lead­ers work to en­sure its pas­sage this week in time to lift the na­tion’s bor­row­ing lim­it and pre­vent a dis­as­trous U.S. de­fault.

Biden spent part of the Memo­r­i­al Day hol­i­day work­ing the phones, call­ing law­mak­ers in both par­ties, as the pres­i­dent does his part to de­liv­er the votes. A num­ber of hard right con­ser­v­a­tives are crit­i­ciz­ing the deal as falling short of the deep spend­ing cuts they want­ed, while lib­er­als de­cry pol­i­cy changes such as new work re­quire­ments for old­er Amer­i­cans in the food aid pro­gram.

A key test will come Tues­day af­ter­noon when the House Rules Com­mit­tee is sched­uled to con­sid­er the pack­age and vote on send­ing it to the full House for a vote ex­pect­ed Wednes­day.

“I feel very good about it,” Biden told re­porters Mon­day as he left Wash­ing­ton for his home in Delaware.

“I’ve spo­ken to a num­ber of the mem­bers,” he said, among them Sen­ate Re­pub­li­can leader Mitch Mc­Connell, a past part­ner in big bi­par­ti­san deals who large­ly sat this one out.

“I spoke to a whole bunch of peo­ple, and it feels good,” Biden said.

To those pro­gres­sive De­moc­rats rais­ing con­cerns about the pack­age, the pres­i­dent had a sim­ple mes­sage: “Talk to me.”

As law­mak­ers size up the 99-page bill, few are ex­pect­ed to be ful­ly sat­is­fied with the fi­nal prod­uct. But Biden, a De­mo­c­rat, and Mc­Carthy, a Re­pub­li­can, are count­ing on pulling ma­jor­i­ty sup­port from the po­lit­i­cal cen­tre, a rar­i­ty in di­vid­ed Wash­ing­ton, to join in vot­ing to pre­vent a cat­a­stroph­ic fed­er­al de­fault.

Wall Street will open ear­ly Tues­day morn­ing de­liv­er­ing its own as­sess­ment, as the U.S. fi­nan­cial mar­kets that had been closed when the deal was struck over the week­end show their re­ac­tion to the out­come.

Mc­Carthy ac­knowl­edged the hard-fought com­pro­mise with Biden will not be “100% of what every­body wants” as he leads a slim House ma­jor­i­ty pow­ered by hard-right con­ser­v­a­tives.

Fac­ing po­ten­tial blow­back from his con­ser­v­a­tive ranks, the Re­pub­li­can speak­er will have to re­ly on up­wards of half the House De­moc­rats and half the House Re­pub­li­cans to push the debt ceil­ing pack­age to pas­sage.

Over­all, the pack­age is a trade-off that would im­pose some spend­ing re­duc­tions for the next two years along with a sus­pen­sion of the debt lim­it in­to Jan­u­ary 2025, push­ing the volatile po­lit­i­cal is­sue past the next pres­i­den­tial elec­tion. Rais­ing the debt lim­it, now $31 tril­lion, would al­low Trea­sury to con­tin­ue bor­row­ing to pay the na­tion’s al­ready in­curred bills.

Ad­di­tion­al­ly, pol­i­cy is­sues are rais­ing the most ob­jec­tions from law­mak­ers.

Lib­er­al law­mak­ers fought hard but were un­able to stop new work re­quire­ments for peo­ple 50 to 54 who re­ceive gov­ern­ment food as­sis­tance and are oth­er­wise able-bod­ied with­out de­pen­dents. The Re­pub­li­cans de­mand­ed the bol­stered work re­quire­ments as part of the deal, but some say the changes to the food stamp pro­gram are not enough.

The Re­pub­li­cans were al­so push­ing to beef up work re­quire­ments for health care and oth­er aid; Biden re­fused to go along on those.

Ques­tions are al­so be­ing raised about an un­ex­pect­ed pro­vi­sion that es­sen­tial­ly gives con­gres­sion­al ap­proval to the Moun­tain Val­ley Pipeline, a nat­ur­al gas project im­por­tant to Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., that many De­moc­rats and oth­ers op­pose.

At the same time, con­ser­v­a­tive Re­pub­li­cans in­clud­ing those from the House Free­dom Cau­cus say the bud­get slash­ing does not go near­ly far enough to have their sup­port.

“No one claim­ing to be a con­ser­v­a­tive could jus­ti­fy a YES vote,” tweet­ed Rep. Bob Good, R-Va.

This “deal” is in­san­i­ty,” said Rep. Ralph Nor­man, R-S.C. “Not gonna vote to bank­rupt our coun­try.”

All told the pack­age would hold spend­ing es­sen­tial­ly flat for the com­ing year, while al­low­ing in­creas­es for mil­i­tary and vet­er­ans ac­counts. It would cap growth at 1% for 2025.

The House Rules Com­mit­tee has three mem­bers from the in­flu­en­tial Free­dom Cau­cus who may very well try to block the pack­age from ad­vanc­ing, forc­ing Mc­Carthy to re­ly on the De­moc­rats on the pan­el to en­sure the bill can be sent to the House floor.

The House aims to vote Wednes­day and send the bill to the Sen­ate, where Ma­jor­i­ty Leader Chuck Schumer along with Mc­Connell are work­ing for a quick pas­sage by week’s end.

Sen­a­tors, who have re­mained large­ly on the side­lines dur­ing much of the ne­go­ti­a­tions be­tween the pres­i­dent and the House speak­er, be­gan in­sert­ing them­selves more force­ful­ly in­to the de­bate.

Some sen­a­tors are in­sist­ing on amend­ments to re­shape the pack­age from both the left and right flanks. That could re­quire time-con­sum­ing de­bates that de­lay fi­nal ap­proval of the deal.

De­mo­c­ra­t­ic Sen. Tim Kaine of Vir­ginia is “ex­treme­ly dis­ap­point­ed” by the pro­vi­sion green­light­ing the con­tro­ver­sial Moun­tain Val­ley Pipeline, his of­fice said in a state­ment. He plans to file an amend­ment to re­move the pro­vi­sion from the pack­age.

Re­pub­li­can Sen. Lind­sey Gra­ham of South Car­oli­na com­plained that the mil­i­tary spend­ing in­creas­es are not enough. “I will use all pow­ers avail­able to me in the Sen­ate to have amend­ment votes to un­do this cat­a­stro­phe for de­fense,” he tweet­ed.

But mak­ing any changes to the pack­age at this stage seems high­ly un­like­ly with so lit­tle time to spare. Con­gress and the White House are rac­ing to meet the Mon­day dead­line now less than a week away. That’s when Trea­sury Sec­re­tary Janet Yellen has said the U.S. would run short of cash and face an un­prece­dent­ed debt de­fault with­out ac­tion.

A de­fault would al­most cer­tain­ly crush the U.S. econ­o­my and spill over around the globe, as the world’s re­liance on the sta­bil­i­ty of the Amer­i­can dol­lar and the coun­try’s lead­er­ship fall in­to ques­tion. —WASH­ING­TON (AP)

___

Sto­ry by LISA MAS­CARO and AAMER MAD­HANI | As­so­ci­at­ed Press

As­so­ci­at­ed Press writ­ers Dar­lene Su­perville, Mary Clare Jalonick and Farnoush Amiri con­tributed to this re­port.


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