The Columbus Dispatch

Biden, Mccarthy debt talks continue

Republican sees ‘lack of urgency’ at White House

- Lisa Mascaro, Stephen Groves and Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON – Debt ceiling negotiator­s for President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy holed up for more talks at the Capitol on Tuesday, but Republican­s warned of a “lack of urgency” at the White House to resolve the budget standoff in time to avert a potentiall­y chaotic federal default.

With barely a week to go before a deadline as soon as June 1, the Democratic president and the Republican speaker were staring down a financial crisis. Failure to strike a deal would be unpreceden­ted, and certain to throw U.S. financial markets into turmoil, inflicting economic pain at home and abroad.

Behind closed doors, Mccarthy urged his slim House Republican majority to “just stick together” despite their own factions as he negotiates the strongest deal possible for conservati­ves, said lawmakers exiting the private session.

“We’re not there yet,” Mccarthy said at the Capitol, reiteratin­g he won’t bring any bill forward “that doesn’t spend less than we spent this year.”

Rank-and-file Republican lawmakers were told they could proceed with their planned recess week around Memorial Day away from Washington, set to begin after Thursday’s session. But Mccarthy warned them to be on 24-hour call to return for voting on any deal.

Dragging into a second week, the negotiatio­ns over raising the nation’s debt limit, now at $31 trillion, were never supposed to arrive at this point – a crisis in the making.

The White House insisted early on that it was unwilling to barter over the need to pay the nation’s bills, demanding that Congress simply lift the ceiling

as it has done many times before with no strings attached.

But Mccarthy, R-calif., visited Biden at the Oval Office in February, urging the president to come to the negotiatin­g table on a budget package that would reduce spending and the nation’s POSTCOVID ballooning deficits in exchange for the vote to allow future debt.

Both men said late Monday after a crucial meeting at the White House – after the president returned from the Group of Seven summit in Japan – that talks were productive.

But with time short to strike a deal, they are laboring to come up with a compromise that could be approved quickly by the Republican House and the Democratic Senate and be signed into law.

Negotiatio­ns are focused on finding agreement over a 2024 budget year limit. Republican­s insist that next year’s government spending be less than it is now, but the White House instead is offering to freeze spending at current 2023 numbers.

Agreement on that topline spending level is vital – to enable Mccarthy to deliver spending restraint for conservati­ves while not being so severe that it would chase off the Democratic votes that would be needed in the divided Congress to pass any bill.

The White House continues to argue that deficits can be reduced by ending tax breaks for wealthier households and some corporatio­ns, but Mccarthy said he told the president at their February meeting that raising revenue from tax hikes is off the table.

The negotiator­s are now also debating the duration of a 1% cap on annual spending growth going forward, with Republican­s dropping their demand for a 10-year cap to six years, but the White House offering only one year, for 2025.

Typically, the debt ceiling has been lifted for the duration of a budget deal, and in this negotiatio­n the White House is angling for a two-year agreement that would push past the presidenti­al elections.

A top Republican negotiator, Rep. Patrick Mchenry of North Carolina, who joined the speaker at the Oval Office on Monday evening, said there needs to be more urgency. Talks resumed Monday night at the Capitol for two hours, and picked up again midday Tuesday.

“What I sense from the White House is a lack of urgency,” Mchenry told reporters.

But on the Senate side, Senate Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell said, “Look, I think everybody needs to relax.” The Kentucky Republican said that “the last 10 times we raised the debt ceiling, there were things attached to it” – as the White House has opposed this year. “This is not that unusual.” However, time is growing short. The House speaker promised lawmakers he will abide by the rule to post any bill for 72 hours before voting, making any action doubtful until the end of the week – just days before the potential deadline. The Senate would also have to pass the package before it could go to Biden’s desk to be signed.

After a weekend of start-stop talks, both Biden and Mccarthy have declared a need to close a compromise deal. U.S. financial markets turned down last week after negotiatio­ns paused amid a jittery economy.

Mccarthy faces a hard-right flank in his own party that is likely to reject any deal, and that has led some Democrats to encourage Biden to resist any compromise with the Republican­s and simply raise the debt ceiling on his own, an unpreceden­ted and legally fraught action.

On Tuesday, the leader of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, Rep. Scott Perry, said, “We all want to stick together. But again, it’s sticking together around the right thing.”

He and others are growing skeptical of the June 1 deadline that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said is when “it is highly likely” the government will be unable to pay all the nation’s bills.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? In a post-meeting statement Monday, House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, left, and President Joe Biden called their talks productive. But “we’re not there yet,” Mccarthy said Tuesday at the Capitol, reiteratin­g he won’t bring any bill forward “that doesn’t spend less than we spent this year.”
SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES In a post-meeting statement Monday, House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, left, and President Joe Biden called their talks productive. But “we’re not there yet,” Mccarthy said Tuesday at the Capitol, reiteratin­g he won’t bring any bill forward “that doesn’t spend less than we spent this year.”

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