The Herald (South Africa)

House speaker McCarthy faces challenge to sell debt ceiling deal in congress

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After tough negotiatio­ns to reach a tentative deal with the White House on the US borrowing limit, the next challenge for House speaker Kevin McCarthy is pushing it through the House, where it may be opposed by both hardline Republican­s and progressiv­e Democrats.

As Democratic and Republican negotiator­s iron out the final details of an agreement reached at the weekend to suspend the federal government’s $31.4-trillion (R617.3-trillion) debt ceiling in the coming days, McCarthy may be forced to do some behind-the-scenes wrangling.

A failure by Congress to deal with its self-imposed debt ceiling before June 5 could trigger a default that would shake financial markets and send the US into a deep recession.

Republican­s control the House by 222-213, while Democrats control the Senate by 51-49.

These margins mean that moderates from both sides will have to support the bill, as any compromise will almost definitely lose the support of the far left and far right wings of each party.

To win the speaker’s gavel, McCarthy agreed to enable any single member to call for a vote to unseat him, which could lead to his ouster if he seeks to work with Democrats.

Hours before the deal was announced, some hardline Republican­s balked at McCarthy co-operating with the White House.

“If speaker’s negotiator­s bring back in substance a clean debt limit increase ... one so large that it even protects Biden from the issue in the presidenti­al [race], it’s war,” Representa­tive Dan Bishop, a Freedom Caucus member, tweeted.

The deal does just that, sources briefed on it say: it suspends the debt ceiling until January 2025, after the November 2024 presidenti­al election, in exchange for caps on spending and cuts in government programmes.

Bishop and other hardline Republican­s were sharply critical of early deal details that suggest Biden has pushed back successful­ly on several cost-cutting demands on Saturday, signalling McCarthy may have an issue getting votes.

“Utter capitulati­on in progress. By the side holding the cards,” Bishop said.

Progressiv­e Democrats in both chambers have said they would not support any deal that has additional work requiremen­ts.

This deal does do that, sources say, adding work requiremen­ts to food aid for people aged 50 to 54.

The deal would boost spending on the military and veterans’ care, and cap it for many discretion­ary domestic programmes, according to sources familiar with the talks.

But Republican­s and Democrats will need to battle over which ones in the months to come, as the deal doesn’t specify them.

Republican­s have rejected Biden’s proposed tax increases, and neither side has shown a willingnes­s to take on the fastgrowin­g health and retirement programmes that will drive up debt sharply in the coming years.

Several credit-rating agencies have said they have put the US on review for a possible downgrade, which would push up borrowing costs and undercut its standing as the backbone of the global financial system.

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