From Yahoo:
“Democrats Dare GOP, Link Debt
Limit to Vital Spending Bill”
House Democrats will include a
suspension of the U.S. debt ceiling in a spending bill needed to keep the
government open past the end of this month, a risky move backed by President Joe
Biden that assures a potentially damaging showdown with Republicans. The debt
ceiling would be suspended through December 2022, which would push that battle
past the mid-term congressional elections. The stopgap funding bill would last
through Dec. 3, 2021, a person familiar with the legislation said -- setting up
another fight to keep the government operating at the end of this year. But
those dates may not matter, with Republicans and Democrats completely at odds
over the debt limit. Without a shift in position by one of the two parties, the
decision to combine the temporary funding measure and the debt ceiling leaves
the U.S. on course for a government shutdown and defaults on federal payments
as soon as next month.“This week, the House of Representatives will pass
legislation to fund the government through December of this year to avoid a
needless government shutdown that would harm American families and our economic
recovery before the September 30th deadline,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a joint statement, referring to
the government’s fiscal-year deadline. “The legislation to avoid a government
shutdown will also include a suspension of the debt limit through December
2022.”
Biden tweeted his support Monday
afternoon, saying Pelosi and Schumer are acting “to keep the government open,
provide disaster relief, and avoid catastrophic default.” Republicans have said
they won’t vote to raise the debt ceiling as long as Democrats are pressing
ahead with a partisan tax and spending plan encompassing much of Biden’s
economic agenda. The White House and congressional Democratic leaders have
insisted that the debt limit vote should be bipartisan. “This is a bipartisan
responsibility, just as it was under my predecessor,” Biden tweeted. “Blocking
it would be inexcusable.” The majority party aims to pressure Republicans into
backing down on their threat by attaching it to the stopgap bill. The
legislation also includes money for hurricane and wildfire disaster aid, which
could make the package more difficult for some Senate Republicans --
particularly from hard-hit hurricane states like Louisiana -- to vote against. Even
so, it would likely be difficult to convince 10 Republicans to vote with
Democrats in the Senate, where the package requires 60 votes for passage. Republicans
and Democrats are also in a dispute over Afghan aid tied to the stopgap bill
and whether to include additional funds to vet refugees, according to a person
familiar with the talks. Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell on Monday reiterated
that Republicans “will not support legislation that raises the debt limit.” “One
party controls the entire government,” McConnell said on the Senate floor.
“They have the power to address this alone.”
‘Dine and Dash’ Schumer
said it was “fiction” for Republicans to label the debt as Democratic debt,
pointing to bipartisan pandemic relief enacted during the Trump administration
as one source of the U.S.’s added debt load. “Both sides, both sides” are
responsible, he added on the Senate floor Monday afternoon. “What Republicans
are doing is nothing short of a ‘dine and dash’ of historic proportions,”
Schumer said. Yet neither side has articulated a strategy for getting
past the standoff and avoiding a default, which Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen
has warned would cause “irreparable harm” to the U.S. economy.
‘Endgame’ Unknown “I don’t
know what the endgame is, because there’s no precedent for anything so
irresponsible,” Senate Appropriations Chairman Patrick Leahy, a Vermont
Democrat, said Monday. Uncertainty about the standoff over the debt
ceiling was one of the factors driving a global stock rout on Monday that was
driven mainly by jitters about China extending a property clampdown and
speculation about whether the Federal Reserve later this week will indicate it
will move toward scaling back monthly asset purchases. The federal debt
ceiling came back into effect, at $28 trillion, in August and the Treasury
Department has warned that without congressional action it may run out of
extraordinary accounting measures to avoid a payment default as soon as
“sometime” in October. The Treasury market is showing some signs of
concern about Congress failing to act in time. Yields on bills that come due in
late October or early November are higher than those that mature before or
after, as investors ask for more compensation for the added risk. It
remains unclear what Democrats plan to do if the bill combining spending and a
debt-ceiling increase fails to pass in the Senate. The Democrats could
raise the debt ceiling alone, using a separate partisan budget tool known as
reconciliation, but have so far declined to do so -- arguing that the debt is
the responsibility of both parties.
^ Congress and Biden have just 9
days to get this done before a Federal Government Shutdown. ^
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/democrats-debt-limit-vital-spending-185409068.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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