Rome News-Tribune

Mccarthy calls for immediate negotiatio­ns on budget, debt

- By Erik Wasson and Jordan Fabian With assistance from Laura Litvan.

House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy called on Democrats to engage in talks with Republican­s over a fiscal plan including an increase in the federal debt limit, while the White House reiterated its rejection of such negotiatio­ns, highlighti­ng the risk of a market-rattling battle over the ceiling later this year.

“I would like to sit down with all the leaders and especially the president and start having discussion­s,” Mccarthy said Tuesday at the Capitol. He noted the government is about six months away from running out of cash. “Who wants to put the nation through some type of threat at the last minute with the debt ceiling? Nobody wants to do that.”

Republican­s now in control of the House have been demanding deep spending cuts as the price for an increase in the statutory ceiling on federal debt. President Joe Biden and congressio­nal

Democrats demand the limit to be raised without conditions — a message reiterated hours after Mccarthy spoke.

“This is something that should be done without conditions,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-pierre said when asked if Biden will sit down with Republican­s to discuss lifting the debt limit. “We’ve been very, very clear about that. We are not going to be negotiatin­g over the debt ceiling.”

The remarks from the two sides suggested no early willingnes­s to engage on a challenge that’s expected to come to a head as soon as June. Failure to boost the ceiling would raise the likelihood of a U.S. payments default, an event Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and her predecesso­rs in the role have warned would be catastroph­ic for the financial system and the economy.

Mccarthy rejected the Democrats’ preference for a simple hike to the ceiling. “I don’t see why you would continue the past behavior.” He said Democrats should negotiate to “set a budget, set a path to get us to a balanced budget and let’s start paying this debt off.”

The speaker said he is seeking changes to major entitlemen­t programs as well as to annual discretion­ary spending that funds the operating budgets of federal agencies.

“Let’s sit down and find a place where we can protect Medicare and Social Security for the future generation­s, let’s put our house in order in how we are going to spend — and let’s make the investment­s we need to make America stronger,” Mccarthy said.

Jean-pierre said, “Congressio­nal Republican­s are threatenin­g to hold the nation’s full faith and credit — a mandate of the Constituti­on — hostage to their demands to cut Social Security to cut Medicare and to cut Meidcaid — brinksmans­hip that threatens the global economy.”

Yellen told congressio­nal leaders on Friday that the government will start deploying extraordin­ary accounting measures this Thursday to avoid running out of cash. She said while

it’s impossible to specify now when those measures will be exhausted, it’s unlikely to be before early June.

Mccarthy said that after an initial conversati­on with Biden upon becoming speaker, he has not had an invitation for a follow-up meeting on the debt ceiling.

Part of the deal Mccarthy struck with ultraconse­rvatives from his party to get their votes in the drawnout House speaker election was to use the debt limit as leverage to force budget cuts, though without specific amounts or programs targeted.

Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, who switched her affiliatio­n from Democrat to

independen­t in December, said Tuesday that Mccarthy’s struggle to gain his post this month after 15 ballots doesn’t bode well for negotiatio­ns on the U.S. debt ceiling.

She called Mccarthy a “dear friend” but said that he made concession­s to farright conservati­ves over a speakershi­p election spanning “several days in a row” that could cause real snarls in the process.

Speaking at the Davos Internatio­nal Economic Forum, Sinema said “a deeply broken system” of partisansh­ip in Congress has harmed chances to find compromise­s.

 ?? Anna Moneymaker/getty Images/tns ?? U.S. House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., at a news conference in Statuary Hall of the U.S. Capitol Building on Jan. 12, in Washington, D.C.
Anna Moneymaker/getty Images/tns U.S. House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., at a news conference in Statuary Hall of the U.S. Capitol Building on Jan. 12, in Washington, D.C.

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