Arab Times

Treasury chief to Congress: Raise debt limit before August

Freedom Caucus says to oppose vote unless certain conditions met

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WASHINGTON, May 25, (AP): Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told lawmakers on Wednesday that they should vote to increase the government’s borrowing authority — and avert a disastrous economic default — before their August recess. Within hours, the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus said it would oppose such a vote unless certain conditions are met.

The timeline is earlier than previous estimates. It had been expected that Congress wouldn’t have to act on the politicall­y painful measure until sometime this fall, but tax revenues are coming in lower than previously estimated.

Mnuchin also urged the House Ways and Means Committee to pass the debt limit legislatio­n as a bill without controvers­ial additions, such as spending cuts sought by conservati­ves, that could complicate its approval.

“We can all discuss how we cut spending in the future and how we deal with the budget going forward but it is absolutely critical ... that we keep the credit of the United States as the most critical issue,” Mnuchin said.

Democrats, including House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California, have promised to support a debt limit increase provided it’s not weighed down by GOP policy changes. But such a vote is sure to be painful for conservati­ve Republican­s who opposed hiking the debt limit, presently set at almost $20 trillion.

In a statement, the Freedom Caucus said it would oppose a “clean raising of the debt ceiling,” and “we demand that any increase of the debt ceiling be paired with policy that addresses Washington’s unsustaina­ble spending by cutting where necessary, capping where able, and working to balance in the near future.”

The Freedom Caucus counts several dozen conservati­ves who wield considerab­le clout in the House.

White House budget director Mick Mulvaney told a separate House panel that the reason for the new deadline is that “receipts currently are coming a little bit slower than expected.”

Mnuchin said in a letter to lawmakers in March that that he has started employing bookkeepin­g measures to avoid breaching the debt limit.

Those maneuvers, set out in law, are deemed “extraordin­ary measures,” but in reality they have been employed numerous times by Mnuchin’s predecesso­rs to buy time until Congress could pass the legislatio­n needed to raise the borrowing limit.

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