Viet Nam News

White House, Republican­s trade barbs over debt ceiling

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President Joe Biden's administra­tion and congressio­nal Republican­s traded barbs on Saturday over raising the federal US$31.4 trillion debt ceiling, with both sides casting the other's proposals as too extreme.

Officials did not meet on Saturday, after two meetings ended on Friday with no progress cited by either side and negotiator­s saying they were not sure when fresh talks would take place.

There are less than two weeks before June 1, when the US Treasury Department has warned that the federal government could be unable to pay all its debts. That would trigger a default that could cause chaos in financial markets and spike interest rates.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-pierre noted in a statement that Biden and Republican House of Representa­tives Speaker Kevin Mccarthy had agreed that any budget agreement would need to be bipartisan and accused Republican­s of offering proposals too far to the right to pass Congress.

Biden told his team to schedule a call on the debt limit with Mccarthy later on Sunday, according to a White House official.

Biden sought the meeting after being briefed by his team in Japan, where he is traveling to participat­e in the Group of 7 (G7) meetings.

Late Saturday afternoon, Mccarthy told reporters at the Capitol that he did not think talks could move forward until Biden was back in the country from the G7 meeting in Japan. He accused Democrats of taking a position that was too extreme toward the left.

"Unfortunat­ely, the White House moved backwards," Mccarthy said, adding that the "socialist wing" of the Democratic Party appeared to be in control.

Mccarthy's office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the White House statement.

Mccarthy's Republican-led House last month passed legislatio­n would cut a wide swath of government spending by 8 per cent next year. Democrats say that would force average cuts of at least 22 per cent on programmes like education and law enforcemen­t, a figure top Republican­s have not disputed.

Divided Congress

Republican­s hold a slim majority of seats in the House and Biden's fellow Democrats have narrow control of the Senate, so no deal can pass without bipartisan support.

A source familiar with the negotiatio­ns said Republican­s had proposed an increase in defence spending, while cutting overall spending. The source also said House Republican­s want to extend tax cuts passed under former President Donald Trump, which would add US$3.5 trillion to the federal debt.

The source said the Biden administra­tion had proposed keeping non-defence discretion­ary spending flat for the next year, which would cut spending when adjustment­s are made for inflation.

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