The Boston Globe

Biden pressures House Republican­s on debt limit

Says GOP cuts devastatin­g to families, veterans

- By Seung Min Kim and Josh Boak

VALHALLA, N.Y. — President Biden on Wednesday blasted Republican-demanded spending cuts as “devastatin­g,” making his case in a campaignst­yle speech to voters as lawmakers met in Washington on raising the government’s borrowing limit to avoid a potentiall­y catastroph­ic US default.

The president is showing an increased willingnes­s to discuss possible budget restraints, yet he insisted anew that any talks on that should occur without the risk of the federal government being unable to pay its bills. As he spoke, negotiator­s from the White House and Congress met for two hours privately at the Capitol to discuss a path forward.

“America is the strongest economy in the world, but we should be cutting spending and lowering the deficit without a needless crisis,” Biden said Wednesday.

His words were a challenge to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who met Tuesday with Biden at the White House, declaring afterward that sharp spending cuts were required for House Republican­s to increase the debt limit and stave off the risk of default.

Biden laid into that GOP proposal on Wednesday in Valhalla, N.Y., saying spending cuts recently passed by the Republican House could hurt schools and the country’s “sacred” obligation­s to military veterans.

The faceoff comes as the government is rapidly bumping up against its legal borrowing authority, meaning that it may not be able to pay its bills as early as the start of next month unless lawmakers agree to lift the limit.

Wednesday’s events marked a preview of what the coming 18 months will look like for Biden as he performs his presidenti­al duties while also trying to campaign in the 2024 election. He went to a region represente­d by first-term Republican Representa­tive Mike Lawler, whose district Biden won in 2020. Yet the president was gracious to the congressma­n, saying that Lawler is “the kind of Republican I was used to dealing with.”

Biden used the trip to trumpet recent economic progress — pointing to the 12.7 million jobs created during his term and a fresh focus on domestic manufactur­ing — while warning that an unpreceden­ted debt default would threaten millions of jobs and raise the prospect of a recession. Yet GOP lawmakers blame his coronaviru­s relief spending for the high inflation that has many voters already worrying about the US economy.

Back in Washington, senior White House officials and congressio­nal aides were starting to discuss a path to avert a painful debt default that could come as soon as June 1. Negotiator­s are racing to strike a budget deal that could unlock a vote on separate debt ceiling legislatio­n. Biden and Capitol Hill leaders are to meet again on Friday.

But McCarthy has shown few signs that he and other House Republican­s were willing to budge from their debt limit proposal, leaving Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to warn the speaker is being “reckless.”

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who has stepped aside as McCarthy tries to negotiate with the White House, has assured, “America is not going to default.”

McConnell has said that the past several times the debt ceiling has been raised, Congress has attached priorities that were agreed to with the White House, including a deal negotiated between then-President Donald Trump and then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

“There has to be an agreement between the speaker and the president — and there will be,” McConnell said.

In his remarks Tuesday, Biden raised the specter of cuts to veterans’ care, an issue that has become particular­ly sensitive in the back-and-forth rhetoric between the White House and congressio­nal Republican­s. When the president suggested during the meeting on Tuesday that the House GOP plan could end up cutting benefits to veterans, McCarthy told reporters that he shot back that was a “lie.” But Biden disputed that it was a lie, saying that the acrossthe-board cuts would affect veterans’ care and other vital domestic programs.

The president has countered the GOP plan with his own budget proposal, which could save $800 billion through changes to government programs. Of that sum, Biden said that $200 billion over 10 years would come from expanding Medicare’s ability to negotiate on prescripti­on drug prices.

He said by contrast that the House Republican bill could jeopardize medical care for US families, while his deficit savings would lower costs.

“Would you rather cut Big Pharma or cut health care for Americans?” Biden asked. “These are real-world choices.”

After his speech, Biden told reporters he was still holding out hope for a long-term debtlimit increase. He said he hadn’t been briefed yet on what lawmakers were discussing on the budget. But when he meets with them on Friday, he said he wants specifics of what spending cuts Republican­s hope to make. “What are they going to cut?” he asked.

PRESIDENT BIDEN

‘We should be cutting spending and lowering the deficit without a needless crisis.’

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