Debt ceiling talks break down and attacks
escalate as deadline approaches
The GOP wants to raise spending for the military,
veterans care and border security; the White House wants to spread the impact
of cuts across the board.
With the deadline for a potential default less than two
weeks away, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said talks would likely not resume
until President Joe Biden returned from Asia late Sunday night. |
By JONATHAN
LEMIRE
05/20/2023
07:44 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/05/20/debt-ceiling-deadline-defense-biden-mccarthy-00098034
Debt
ceiling negotiations deteriorated after Republican negotiators rejected a White
House offer to limit spending on both defense and a series of domestic
programs, two people familiar with negotiations said Saturday.
Republicans
instead pushed for increased military spending, which would require deeper cuts
to a series of domestic spending programs that the White House has deemed off
limits. With the deadline for a potential default less than two weeks away,
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said talks would likely not resume until President
Joe Biden returned from Asia late Sunday night.
The impasse
came as both sides sharpened their rhetoric, with White House aides abandoning
their silence with a fusillade of attacks Saturday accusing the GOP of working
in bad faith and threatening the financial stability and credit of the nation.
Biden aides
offered what they viewed as a key concession by proposing that Congress hold
flat it’s spending on defense, as well as a series of domestic programs
including housing aid, education and scientific research. The White House —
which earlier this year sought major increases by raising taxes — said that the
adjustment would instead amount to a cut because of year-over-year inflation.
But the GOP
negotiators rejected the offer, instead insisting on increasing spending for
the military, veterans care and border security. To then satisfy the GOP demand
to slash overall spending, that would mean the resulting domestic spending cuts
would have to increase dramatically to what the White House has deemed
“draconian” levels.
Republicans
claimed that the White House negotiations — led by top Biden staff while the
president is at the G-7 summit in Japan — had changed their offer.
“Unfortunately,
the White House moved backwards,” McCarthy told reporters at the Capitol on
Saturday. “They actually want to spend more money than we spent this year. We
can’t do that. We all know how big this deficit is.”
The White
House dismissed the claim and sharpened its attacks on the GOP position. Staff
members had largely maintained their silence during negotiations but sent out a
series of blistering statements and policy memos Saturday, zeroing in on how
McCarthy’s insistence on preserving the Trump-era tax cut skewed toward helping
the wealthy and giant corporations would add $3.5 trillion to the debt.
“The
Speaker’s team put on the table an offer that was a big step back and contained
a set of extreme partisan demands that could never pass both Houses of
Congress,” said White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre in a statement.
“It is only
a Republican leadership beholden to its MAGA wing — not the President or
Democratic leadership — who are threatening to put our nation into default for
the first time in our history unless extreme partisan demands are met.”
When talks
stalled early last week, Biden and McCarthy agreed to empower staff members to
deal while the president was overseas. Those talks made some progress for a few
days before breaking down Friday.
Over the
White House’s objections, McCarthy had insisted that negotiations over the
budget be twinned with a vote to raise the nation’s debt ceiling — a move that,
most years, is done peacefully and in a bipartisan fashion.
Now that
the negotiations appear linked, there is growing worry that an agreement won’t
come before the June 1 deadline at which time Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen
has said she cannot guarantee that the U.S. government will be able to pay all
its bills after that date. A possible default would likely sink the U.S. into a
recession and rattle the global economy.
The details
of the White House’s latest offer were first reported by The Washington Post.


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