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U.S. Senate approves boosting debt limit to $31.4 trillion, sends to House

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate yesterday approved raising the federal government's debt limit by $2.5 trillion, to about $31.4 trillion, and sent it to the House of Representa­tives to pass and avert an unpreceden­ted default.

The 50-49 party-line vote follows a months-long standoff between Democrats and Republican­s, with the latter seeking to force President Joe Biden's party to raise the debt limit on its own from the current $28.9 trillion level, generating fodder for attack ads during the 2022 congressio­nal elections.

A deal last week between Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and his Republican counterpar­t, Mitch McConnell, set the stage for Tuesday's vote, bypassing normal Senate rules requiring at least 60 of the chamber's 100 members to agree to advance most legislatio­n.

The Democratic-led House will also need to approve the bill before sending it to Biden for his signature. The chamber was expected to take the matter up later on Tuesday.

Schumer said the increase would cover the government's needs into 2023, through the Nov. 8 midterm elections that will determine control of Congress.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen had urged Congress to hike the debt limit before Wednesday.

Under the unusual deal worked out by Schumer and McConnell, and approved by both chambers last week, legislatio­n raising the debt ceiling could be passed this one time in the Senate by a simple majority, which meant Democrats could get it through on their own.

In the House, Republican Representa­tive Jodey Arrington told the chamber's Rules Committee he was disappoint­ed that McConnell had agreed to the deal. The country's debt level was at its highest since World War Two and "we ain't in a war," Arrington said.

The committee's chairman, Democrat Jim McGovern, responded: "I don't normally have many nice things to say about Mitch McConnell, but I do think he understand­s that ... not to allow this to go forward, it would be ruinous to our economy." The committee then voted 9-4 to move the legislatio­n to the House floor.

The increase is needed in part to cover debt incurred during Republican Donald Trump's presidency, when the debt rose by about $7.85 trillion, partly through sweeping tax cuts and spending to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.

Republican­s, who oppose the debt ceiling increase and control half of the Senate's 100 seats, have tried to link the vote to Biden's $1.75 trillion "Build Back Better" bill to bolster the social safety net and fight climate change.

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