Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pelosi demanding deal on caps

Speaker says debt limit will not rise without an accord

- By Andrew Taylor The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday that the Democratic-controlled House won’t pass must-do legislatio­n to increase the government’s borrowing cap until the Trump administra­tion agrees to boost spending limits on domestic programs.

The California Democrat said she’ll agree to increase the so-called debt ceiling, which is needed to avoid a market-cratering default on U.S. government obligation­s this fall. But she says she’ll do so only after President Donald Trump agrees to lift tight “caps” that threaten both the Pentagon and domestic agencies with sweeping budget cuts.

“When we lift the caps, then we can talk about lifting the debt ceiling. That would have to come second or simultaneo­us, but not before lifting the caps,” Pelosi told reporters.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who is leading negotiatio­ns for the administra­tion, shares Pelosi’s sentiments, though his top priority is to increase the borrowing cap.

“If we reach a caps deal, the debt ceiling has to be included,” Mnuchin said Wednesday.

Pelosi’s remarks came as bipartisan negotiatio­ns to increase the spending limits have sputtered, though Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., is eager for an agreement. A pair of negotiatin­g sessions last month generated some initial optimism, but there hasn’t been any visible progress since.

“We were making some progress, but then they kind of backed away from it,” Pelosi said.

At issue are two separate needs that are often linked together.

Probably most important is to increase the government’s almost $22 trillion debt limit so that it can borrow money from investors and foreign countries such as China to redeem government bonds, pay benefits such as Social Security and issue paychecks to federal workers. The Treasury is using a familiar set of bookkeepin­g tricks to stay within the existing debt limit, but Congress has to act by mid-fall to avoid a first-ever default.

Increasing the spending caps is required to set an overall limit for agency budgets appropriat­ed by lawmakers every year to permit the annual round of appropriat­ions bills, expected to total more than $1.3 trillion, to advance with bipartisan support in the House and Senate.

Any budget deal would represent the fifth two-year budget agreement since a 2011 budget and debt bill set the stage for much-reviled automatic cuts known as sequestrat­ion. Without an agreement, government-wide automatic cuts of $125 billion would hit both the military and domestic agencies.

 ??  ?? Nancy Pelosi
Nancy Pelosi

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