Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Yellen: Deadline for debt extended

Negotiator­s still urged to reach a compromise soon

- Lisa Mascaro, Seung Min Kim and Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON – Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Friday the projected debt ceiling deadline is extended to June 5, four days later than previously estimated.

Yet Yellen renewed her warning in a letter to Congress that inaction on raising the borrowing limit would “cause severe hardship.”

Yellen’s latest letter to legislator­s on the “X-date” came as Congress broke for the long Memorial Day weekend. She said that the Treasury Department had deployed an extraordin­ary measure not used since 2015 to get the U.S. financial position to this point.

The X-date arrives when the government no longer has enough of a financial cushion to pay all its bills, having exhausted the measures it’s been using since January to stretch existing funds.

Earlier Friday, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said his Republican debt negotiator­s and the White House had hit “crunch” time, straining to wrap up an agreement with President Joe Biden to curb federal spending and lift the nation’s borrowing limit ahead of the fastcoming deadline.

They had hoped to end weeks of frustratin­g talks and strike a deal by this weekend. Treasury now says the government could start running out of money as soon as a week from Monday, sending the U.S. into a potentiall­y catastroph­ic default with economic spillover around the world.

Anxious retirees and social service groups were among those making default contingenc­y plans as lawmakers left town for the long holiday weekend. The next batch of Social Security checks are due to go out next week.

“The world is watching,” said Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva after meeting Friday with Yellen. “Let’s remember we are now in the 12th hour.”

Democrat Biden and the Republican speaker were narrowing differences, laboring to lock in details on a two-year agreement that would restrain federal spending and lift the legal borrowing limit past next year’s presidenti­al election.

Any deal would need to be a political compromise, with support from both Democrats and Republican­s to pass the divided Congress.

“We know it’s a crunch,” McCarthy said as he arrived at the emptied out Capitol, acknowledg­ing more progress needed to be made.

In remarks at the White House honoring the Louisiana State University champion women’s basketball team, Biden gave a shoutout to one of his top negotiator­s saying she’s “putting together a deal, hopefully.”

He was referring to Office of Management and Budget Director Shalanda Young, who attended the event, as did Rep. Garret Graves of Louisiana, a top Republican negotiator.

While the contours of the deal have been taking shape to cut spending for 2024 and impose a 1% cap on spending growth for 2025, the two sides remain stuck on various provisions. The debt ceiling, now at $31 trillion, would be lifted for two years to pay the nation’s incurred bills.

A person familiar with the talks said the two sides were “dug in” on whether or not to agree to Republican demands to impose stiffer work requiremen­ts on people who receive government food stamps, cash assistance and health care aid.

House Democrats have called such requiremen­ts for health care and food aid a nonstarter.

House Republican­s have pushed the issue to the brink, displaying risky political bravado in leaving town for the Memorial Day holiday. Lawmakers are tentativel­y not expected back at work until Tuesday.

Biden will also be away this weekend, departing Friday for the presidenti­al retreat at Camp David, Maryland, and Sunday for his home in Wilmington, Delaware. The Senate is on recess and will return after Memorial Day.

“Each time there is forward progress, the issues that remain become more difficult and more challengin­g,” said negotiator Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., at midday Friday.

Weeks of negotiatio­ns between Republican­s and the White House have failed to produce a deal – in part because the Biden administra­tion resisted negotiatin­g with McCarthy over the debt limit, arguing that the country’s full faith and credit should not be used as leverage to extract other partisan priorities.

One idea is to set the topline budget numbers but then add a “snap-back” provision to enforce cuts if Congress is unable during its annual appropriat­ions process to meet the new goals.

On work requiremen­ts for aid recipients, the White House is particular­ly resisting measures that could drive more people into poverty or take their health care, said the person familiar with the talks, who was granted anonymity to describe behind-closed-door discussion­s.

Over the Republican demand to rescind money for the Internal Revenue Service, it’s still an “open issue” whether the sides will compromise by allowing the funding to be pushed into other domestic programs, the person said.

In one potential developmen­t, Republican­s may be easing their demand to boost defense spending beyond what Biden had proposed in his budget, instead offering to keep it at his proposed levels, according to another person familiar with the talks.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and the White House are straining to strike a budget compromise. The two sides are narrowing difference­s on an agreement that would curb spending and lift the borrowing limit.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and the White House are straining to strike a budget compromise. The two sides are narrowing difference­s on an agreement that would curb spending and lift the borrowing limit.

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