US debt ceiling: Republican hard-right vows to
sink deal hours before vote expected
Freedom caucus has attacked House leader Kevin
McCarthy’s deal with Joe Biden to raise the debt ceiling before the default
deadline of 5 June
Joan E Greve in
Washington
@joanegreve
Wed 31 May
2023 11.00 BST
Members of
the hard-right House Freedom Caucus have attacked the proposed spending cuts in
the debt ceiling bill as woefully inadequate, and vowed to oppose the
legislation when it hits the floor.
“We had the
time to act, and this deal fails – fails completely,” Representative Scott
Perry of Pennsylvania, chair of the Freedom Caucus, said on Tuesday. “We will
do everything in our power to stop it and end it now.”
The House
is expected to hold a final vote on the bill on Wednesday, while other members
of the Freedom Caucus continue to denounce the compromise brokered by the
Republican speaker, Kevin McCarthy, and President Joe Biden over the weekend.
The
compromise bill, formally named the Fiscal Responsibility Act, would suspend
the debt ceiling until 2025, allowing the US to avoid a default that could reap
devastating consequences on the American economy. The treasury secretary, Janet
Yellen, has warned that the federal government will be unable to pay its bills
starting on 5 June unless Congress takes action.
In addition
to the debt ceiling suspension, the bill includes government spending cuts and
expanded work requirements demanded by McCarthy.
“There has
been a lot of hard work and a lot of late nights that have gone into changing
the spending trajectory in this town,” Steve Scalise, the House majority
leader, told reporters at the Capitol on Tuesday night. “For once in a long,
long time, Washington is actually going to spend less money next year than it
is this year, and that’s a reform that all of us can support.”
During that
hearing, two Freedom Caucus members who sit on the panel, Chip Roy of Texas and
Ralph Norman of South Carolina, attempted to block the legislation from
advancing, but they were outnumbered by their colleagues. The final vote in the
rules committee was 7-6 to advance the bill, with four Democrats joining Roy
and Norman in opposing the measure.
“The
Republican conference right now has been torn asunder,” Roy said ahead of the
hearing. “Not one Republican should vote for this deal. It is a bad deal.”
But the
Republican chair of the rules committee, Tom Cole of Oklahoma, defended the
bill as the party’s best possible option with Democrats in control of the White
House and the Senate.
“Today’s
bill is a product of compromise that reflects the realities of a divided
government,” Cole said at the hearing. “In a true negotiation, you always get
less than you want and give up more than you’d like.”
Despite
reassurances from McCarthy and his allies, it remains unclear how many House
Republicans will support the proposal. In addition to the Freedom Caucus, some
of the more centrist members of the House Republican conference like
representatives Nancy Mace of South Carolina and Wesley Hunt of Texas said they
would vote against the bill.
Dan Bishop
of North Carolina, a member of the Freedom Caucus, predicted that most of the
House Republican conference would oppose the legislation, forcing McCarthy to
rely on Democrats to pass the bill.
“This is a
career-defining vote for every Republican,” Bishop said Tuesday. “This bill, if
it passes, must pass with less than half of the Republican conference.”
The House
Democratic leader, Hakeem Jeffries, underscored the reality that Republicans
must provide most of the 218 votes needed to get the bill approved.
“This is an
agreement that, at their insistence, they negotiated with the administration,”
Jeffries said. “It’s our full and complete expectation that they are going to
produce at least 150 votes.”
Some House
Democrats also appeared conflicted over the compromise measure on Tuesday,
bemoaning the proposed spending cuts while emphasizing the crucial need to
increase the government’s borrowing limit before 5 June.
“There are
some pros to the bill. The chief one is that it raises the debt limit to 2025
and ensures that we avoid a Republican-led catastrophic default,” Pramila
Jayapal, chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said on Tuesday.
“I don’t
want to minimize the challenges with the bill. There will be real harmful
impacts for poor people and working people,” she added.
Jayapal
said her team was in the process of conducting a whip count to assess where
progressive members stand on the debt ceiling bill, but it appears certain that
the legislation will win bipartisan support in the House, as the center-left
New Democrat Coalition has endorsed the proposal.
If the bill
passes the House, it will move on to the Senate, where lawmakers will have only
a few days to approve the proposal before the 5 June default deadline. Even if
McCarthy’s compromise can become law, the speaker’s troubles may be just
beginning.
Members of
the Freedom Caucus, some of whom initially resisted McCarthy’s speakership bid
in January, toyed with the idea of ousting him depending on the outcome of
Wednesday’s vote.
Representative
Matt Gaetz of Florida told Newsmax on Tuesday, “If a majority of Republicans
are against a piece of legislation, and you use Democrats to pass it, that
would immediately be a black-letter violation of the deal we had with McCarthy
to allow his ascent to the speakership, and it would likely trigger an
immediate motion to vacate.”
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