The Jerusalem Post

Biden says Republican debt ceiling offer ‘unacceptab­le’

- • By TREVOR HUNNICUTT, JEFF MASON and ANDREA SHALAL

HIROSHIMA, Japan/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – US President Joe Biden on Sunday called Republican­s’ latest offers in talks on lifting the government’s debt ceiling “unacceptab­le,” but said he would be willing to cut spending together with tax adjustment­s to reach a deal.

Speaking to reporters in Hiroshima, Japan, after a meeting of G7 leaders, Biden suggested some Republican­s in Congress were willing to see the US default on its debt so that the disastrous results would prevent Biden, a Democrat, from winning re-election in 2024.

Less than two weeks remain until June 1, when the Treasury Department has warned that the federal government could be unable to pay all its debts. That would trigger a default that could cause chaos in financial markets and spike interest rates.

Biden said he would speak to top congressio­nal Republican Kevin McCarthy on his flight home and hoped the speaker of the House of Representa­tives had been waiting to negotiate with Biden directly.

“Much of what they’ve already proposed is simply, quite frankly, unacceptab­le,” Biden said. “It’s time for Republican­s to accept that there is no bipartisan deal to be made solely, solely on their partisan terms. They have to move as well.”

The talks have grown increasing­ly heated in the past two days. Democratic and Republican negotiator­s said Friday meetings at the Capitol yielded no progress and the two sides did not meet on Saturday. Instead, each has reverted to calling the other’s position extremist.

“Unfortunat­ely, the White House moved backwards,” McCarthy told reporters late Saturday.

The Democratic president said he believed he had the authority to invoke the 14th Amendment to the US Constituti­on to raise the debt ceiling without Congress, but that it was unclear that enough time remained to try to use that untested legal theory to avoid default.

Officials did not meet on Saturday and announced no progress from meetings on Friday or any plan to talk again. Instead, both sides cast the other’s proposals as too extreme.

A source familiar with the negotiatio­ns said Republican­s had proposed an increase in defense spending, while cutting overall spending. The source also said House Republican­s wanted to extend tax cuts passed under then-President Donald Trump, which would add $3.5 trillion to the federal debt.

The source said the Biden administra­tion had proposed keeping non-defense discretion­ary spending flat for the next year.

Another person familiar with the talks said Republican­s’ latest proposal included “steep” cuts over a longer period of time than recent budget deals, as well as a variety of measures that irk Democrats, including work requiremen­ts for aid, cuts to food assistance and less money for the tax-collecting Internal Revenue Service.

The person said Republican­s had also rejected Democrats’ proposed measures to raise revenue, including drug payment reforms and closing “tax loopholes.”

 ?? (Kiyoshi Ota/Pool via Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT Joe Biden speaks during a news conference following the G7 leaders’ summit in Hiroshima yesterday.
(Kiyoshi Ota/Pool via Reuters) US PRESIDENT Joe Biden speaks during a news conference following the G7 leaders’ summit in Hiroshima yesterday.

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