Debt ceiling deal clears first hurdle with House
panel and advances for debate
The committee voted 7-6 to allow debate by the full
chamber with expected vote on passage on Wednesday
Martin
Pengelly in New York and agencies
Wed 31 May
2023 02.44 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/may/30/republicans-mccarthy-debt-ceiling-deal-support
The
bipartisan debt ceiling deal brokered by Joe Biden and Kevin McCarthy passed an
important hurdle Tuesday evening, advancing to the full House of
Representatives for debate and an expected vote on passage on Wednesday even
amid opposition from far-right Republicans.
Earlier in
the day, McCarthy, the Republican speaker of the US House, had insisted that
supporting the debt ceiling deal would be “easy” for his party and it was
likely to pass through Congress despite one prominent rightwinger’s verdict
that the proposed agreement is a “turd sandwich”.
The House
rules committee voted 7-6 Tuesday to allow debate by the full chamber, with two
committee Republicans bucking party leadership and opposing the bill. Their
opposition underscored the need for Democrats to help pass the measure in the
House, which is controlled by Republicans with a narrow majority.
But amid
loud denunciations from the Republican right and also from closer to the
centre, McCarthy said he was not worried the agreement would fail, or that it
would threaten his hold on the speaker’s gavel.
The bill is
the “most conservative deal we’ve ever had”, McCarthy told reporters, of a
two-year agreement that includes spending freezes and rescinding Internal
Revenue Service funding while leaving military and veterans spending untouched.
Negotiators
fielded by McCarthy and Joe Biden reached the deal to raise the $31.4tn US debt
ceiling last weekend.
A default
would be likely to have catastrophic consequences for the US and world
economies. The treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, has said that will happen on 5
June if no bill is passed.
But members
of the far-right House Freedom Caucus have balked at the deal.
Chip Roy of
Texas, who in January played a key role in securing the speakership for
McCarthy after 15 rounds of voting, amid a rightwing rebellion, had perhaps the
most pungent response.
He said the
debt ceiling deal was a “turd sandwich”, because it did not include spending
cuts demanded by the hard right.
Speaking to
reporters at the Capitol on Tuesday, Roy said he had not changed his mind.
“Right now,
it ain’t good,” he said.
Another
rightwing firebrand, Thomas Massie of Kentucky, said he “anticipate[d] voting
for” the bill, having said: “I think it’s important to keep in mind the debt
limit bill itself does not spend money.”
But a
comparative moderate, Nancy Mace of South Carolina, resorted to personal abuse
of Biden when she said on Twitter: “Washington is broken. Republicans got
outsmarted by a president who can’t find his pants. I’m voting no on the debt
ceiling debacle because playing the DC game isn’t worth selling out our kids
and grandkids.”
Republicans
regularly claim without evidence that Biden, 80, is too old and mentally unfit
to be president. Conversely, many political observers have credited Biden and
his White House negotiators with pulling off a deal to avoid default while
keeping Democrats on the front foot.
Saluting
Biden’s “capacity to over-perform after an onslaught of negative press and
Democratic hand-wringing”, the Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin said:
“Biden brushed back the litany of outrageous demands, kept his spending agenda
and tax increases intact and got his two-year debt limit increase.
“And in
making a deal with [McCarthy] Biden helps stoke dissension on the GOP side as
the extreme Maga wing denounces the agreement.”
Biden has
also faced criticism from progressives and from environmental activists, in the
latter case over the inclusion in the deal of approval for a controversial
pipeline in Virginia and West Virginia.
“Singling
out the Mountain Valley pipeline for approval in a vote about our nation’s
credit limit is an egregious act,” said Peter Anderson of Appalachian Voices,
which has charted hundreds of environmental violations by the project.
Republicans
control the House by 222-213. By Tuesday afternoon, more than 20 Republicans
had said they would vote against the deal. Donald Trump, the frontrunner for
the Republican presidential nomination, has said the party should let default
happen if Biden does not cave.
If
defections proliferate, McCarthy could be left needing Democratic support to
pass the bill arising from the deal and thereby avoid default.
On Tuesday,
the House Democratic leader, Hakeem Jeffries, said his party would do their
part to win passage of the bill.
“My
expectation is House Republicans will keep their commitment to produce at least
two-thirds of their conference which is approximately 150 votes” and pass the
bill, Jeffries said. “Democrats are committed to making sure we do our part in
avoiding default.”
On Tuesday,
one of Biden’s negotiators, the budget director, Shalanda Young, said the White
House “strongly urged” Congress to pass the bill. Wally Adeyemo, the deputy treasury
secretary, told MSNBC the deal was a “good faith compromise” that took a debt
default off the table.
A White
House spokesperson said Biden was having conversations with both progressive
and moderate Democrats ahead of a House vote planned for Wednesday.
Markets
have reacted positively to the deal so far.
Reuters contributed reporting
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário