The Boston Globe

Debt ceiling increase proposed

McCarthy ties it to spending cuts

- By Catie Edmondson and Jim Tankersley

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Monday proposed a one-year debt ceiling increase paired with a set of spending cuts and policy changes, backing down substantia­lly from earlier demands but making clear that Republican­s would not raise the borrowing limit to avert a catastroph­ic debt default without conditions.

In a speech delivered from the New York Stock Exchange, McCarthy said House Republican­s would vote “in the coming weeks” on a measure that would lift the debt ceiling into the next year in exchange for freezing spending at last year’s levels while enacting stricter work requiremen­ts for social programs and a host of regulatory rollbacks. The plan, which would be dead on arrival in the Senate, would set the stage for yet another fiscal confrontat­ion just as the presidenti­al campaign hits a critical period.

“I’m not predetermi­ning what has to happen,” McCarthy said in a speech that sought to cast President Biden, who has repeatedly called for a debt-limit increase, as the person standing in the way. “I want a responsibl­e, sensible debt ceiling that puts us on an economic path to make America stronger. It works for every American. But that cannot happen if the president continues to ignore the problem.”

“A no-strings-attached debt limit increase will not pass,” he said.

The debt limit is expected to be breached as early as July unless Congress acts to raise it.

The speech came as Republican­s, plagued by internal divisions, toil to agree on a fiscal blueprint to accomplish their demand that any such increase be paired with substantia­l spending cuts. It was unclear whether the proposal McCarthy laid out on Monday could draw enough support to pass with their slim majority. The outline was significan­tly narrower than the party’s stated objectives earlier this year that included balancing the budget in 10 years.

McCarthy’s decision to offer it publicly on Wall Street suggested that the GOP is under growing pressure to produce a plan to calm jitters among investors about the grim outlook for a deal to avert a catastroph­ic default this summer. Yet he shrugged off such concerns on Monday during a question-and-answer session after his speech, saying, “Markets go up and down.”

“Markets are reacting to work we’ve done,” he said in response to a question about whether he was monitoring market conditions. “So I shouldn’t monitor you; I should monitor what we’re doing.”

The bill McCarthy says he is planning to put forward would freeze spending at last fiscal year’s levels, rescind tens of billions of dollars in unspent pandemic relief funds, enact stricter work requiremen­ts on food stamp and Medicaid recipients, expand domestic mining and fossil fuel production, and roll back federal regulation­s Republican­s view as overly burdensome.

The Democratic-controlled Senate would refuse the plan, but it would act as House Republican­s’ marker for negotiatio­ns with the White House.

Biden and his aides insist that Congress must raise the debt limit without conditions, but they say the president is open to separate discussion­s on the federal budget — once McCarthy produces a formal budget proposal. White House officials have criticized the budget cuts Republican­s have floated, including the work requiremen­ts and proposed limits on domestic spending programs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States