Houston Chronicle

Dems face heavy lift on agenda as GOP stands by

- By Lisa Mascaro and Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON — Congress must fund the government in the next 10 days, or risk a federal shutdown.

Raise the nation’s borrowing limit, or default on its debt.

All this while Democratic lawmakers are laboring to shoulder President Joe Biden’s massive $3.5 trillion “build back better” agenda through the House and Senate with stark opposition from Republican­s.

The magnitude of the challenges ahead and the speed required to accomplish the job are like nothing Congress has faced in recent memory, situating Biden’s entire domestic agenda and the political fate of his Democratic party at a crucial moment.

On Monday, the Democratic leaders backed by the White House announced they would push ahead on one front — with a vote to fund the government and suspend the debt limit, all but daring Republican­s to oppose the package and risk a crisis.

“The American people expect our Republican colleagues to live up to their responsibi­lities and make good on the debts they proudly helped incur,” wrote House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer in a joint statement.

The Republican­s have made it clear they will not be helping with almost any of it. Instead, as the minority party in Congress hoping to regain control in the next election in 2022, Republican­s plan to sit back, watching and waiting to see if Biden and his allies can succeed against the odds — or spectacula­rly fail.

The vote this week on funding to keep the government running past Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal year, will force the political stalemate into the open.

The package is expected to keep most spending at its current levels on a stopgap basis through the end of the year and include supplement­al funds for the aftermath of Hurricane Ida and other natural disasters, as well as money to help defray the evacuation­s from Afghanista­n. Tacking on legislativ­e language to allow more borrowing to cover the nation’s debt payments through 2022 sets the stage for a showdown.

The Treasury Department warned that it will soon run out of cash on hand and have to rely on incoming receipts to pay its obligation­s, now at $28.4 trillion. That could force the Treasury to delay or miss payments, a devastatin­g situation.

Meanwhile, behind the scenes, Democrats are negotiatin­g among themselves over Biden’s big $3.5 trillion package as the price tag likely slips to win over skeptical centrist lawmakers who view it as too much.

One topic the bill may not cover is immigratio­n, after the Senate parliament­arian advised that Biden’s proposal would not pass the chamber’s rules for considerat­ion under the budget process.

With Republican­s opposed in lockstep to Biden’s sweeping vision, Democrats have no votes to spare. As Democrats try to rally support from their own ranks, they have only the most narrow control of Congress as the majority, with a 50-50 Senate and just a few votes’ margin in the House.

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