New York Post

HEY, ‘DEAL’ US OUT

Many GOPers say debt pact a no go

- By RONNY REYES

Many congressio­nal Republican­s have slammed the tentative debt-ceiling deal House Speaker Kevin McCarthy reached with President Biden, and said they will vote “no” on the measure despite fears of a catastroph­ic economic collapse.

While McCarthy boasted Sunday that 95% of his fellow GOP members support the deal, which he promised carried a historic amount of spending cuts, many conservati­ves took to Twitter to bash the compromise­s the California­n and Biden made as “unacceptab­le.”

Rep. Ralph Norman (R-SC) described the deal as “insanity,” writing: “A $4T debt ceiling increase with virtually no cuts is not what we agreed to. Not gonna vote to bankrupt our country.”

Rep. Bob Good (R-Va.) also slammed the proposed $4 trillion increase to the debt limit, tweeting, “IF that is true, I don’t need to hear anything else. No one claiming to be a conservati­ve could justify a YES vote.”

Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colo.) said McCarthy’s tentative deal ultimately gave up what the GOP was looking for in the negotiatio­ns.

“I listened to Speaker McCarthy earlier tonight outline the deal with President Biden and I am appalled by the debt ceiling surrender,” he said. “The bottom line is that the US will have $35 trillion of debt in January 2025. That is completely unacceptab­le.”

Fellow Coloradan Lauren Boebert agreed that she would join Buck and others in voting “no.”

“Our base didn’t volunteer, door knock and fight so hard to get us the majority for this kind of compromise deal with Joe Biden,” she said. “You can count me as a NO on this deal. We can do better.”

Foes in Senate, too

Over in the Senate, Lindsey Graham (R-SC) warned that adopting the budget would be a “joke” given its level of defense spending.

“I want to raise the debt ceiling, it would be irresponsi­ble not to do it,” Graham told Fox News Sunday. “I want to control spending, I’d like to have a smaller IRS, I’d like to clawback the unused COVID money.

“And I know you can’t get to perfect, but what I will not do is adopt the Biden defense budget and call it a success,” Graham said.

He claimed the real winners of the proposed defense budget would be China and Russia, adding that he would not be “intimidate­d,” by the June 5 deadline Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen set to avoid a national default.

“So the Biden defense budget was a joke before and if we adopted it as Republican­s will be doing a great disservice to the party of Ronald Reagan,” Graham said. “We should raise the debt ceiling, but we should not cripple the military’s ability to defend the nation as a trade off, spending below inflation is not fully funding the military.”

While full details are still under wraps, the deal would raise the debt limit for two years — extending it beyond the 2024 presidenti­al election — in exchange for cutting government spending during the same period.

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 ?? ?? ‘UNACCEPTAB­LE’: Republican Reps. Bob Good (from left), Ken Buck and Ralph Norman say they will vote “No” on the tentative agreement worked out on raising the federal debt ceiling.
‘UNACCEPTAB­LE’: Republican Reps. Bob Good (from left), Ken Buck and Ralph Norman say they will vote “No” on the tentative agreement worked out on raising the federal debt ceiling.

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