Viet Nam News

Debt talks 'productive,' but no deal

White House meeting with Speaker came after President Biden returned from a trip to Asia

- AFP

A top US Republican and President Joe Biden on Monday both said their first one-on-one talks in months to avert a calamitous debt default were "productive," but that disagreeme­nts were still blocking any potential deal.

The White House meeting came after Biden returned from a trip to Asia early to hammer out an agreement ahead of the US Treasury's June 1 cut off date for Congress to authorize more borrowing.

"I felt we had a productive discussion. We don't have an agreement yet, but I did feel the discussion was productive in areas (where) we have difference­s of opinion," House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy said after the talks.

Mccarthy told reporters that negotiator­s were going to "work through the night" to move the sides closer and that he and Biden would "talk every day to try to find a way to get this done."

Debt limits are raised periodical­ly to cover repayments on loans that have already been approved and spent, but House Republican­s are insisting this time that averting a default must be paired with deep cuts to bring down the country's $31.8 trillion debt.

As they sat down for the meeting, Biden said "I am optimistic we are going to make some progress," adding both sides understood they have "a significan­t responsibi­lity" to solve the impasse.

Afterwards the president used similar language as Mccarthy in a statement, calling the meeting "productive," while adding that "areas of disagreeme­nt" remain.

'Red line'

The on-again, off-again discussion­s sputtered through the weekend, with Mccarthy's team and White House negotiator­s meeting for more than two hours on Sunday night and another three on Monday.

Biden and Mccarthy also spoke by phone Sunday as the president flew home from a G7 summit in Japan.

After Monday's Oval Office meeting and Mccarthy's descriptio­n of the talks as productive, his team hardened its tone, with Republican congressma­n and negotiator Patrick Mchenry telling reporters: "What I sense from the White

House is a lack of urgency."

Republican­s insist on spending less money in fiscal year 2024 than 2023, calling it a "red line."

The White House has offered a freeze for 2024 in exchange for Republican­s supporting tax increases for corporatio­ns and wealthy Americans but Mccarthy has rejected the idea.

The Biden administra­tion has proposed limiting spending on some domestic programs but wants the Pentagon to share in the cuts.

Republican­s have pushed for boosted military and border security spending, with major rollbacks to non-defense programs.

Disputes also remain over what a White House official characteri­zed as increasing­ly hard-line Republican demands for beefed-up work requiremen­ts for social welfare programs.

Biden points out that Republican­s raised the borrowing cap three times under his predecesso­r Donald Trump without threatenin­g to default on the country's debt obligation­s.

If lawmakers fail to raise the borrowing cap, the government will careen into default for the first time in history, with potentiall­y catastroph­ic results.

Many experts say that in a worstcase scenario global stock markets would melt down as the US economy lurches into a downward spiral, killing millions of jobs.

The president is being pressured by progressiv­es in his party to rely on the US Constituti­on's 14th Amendment -which states that the validity of public debt "shall not be questioned" -- to bypass Congress and increase the limit on his own.

But he and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen cautioned that the courts would not be able to resolve any legal disputes quickly enough to meet the deadline.

Yellen sent a letter to Congress on Monday warning again that the United States could find itself unable to pay its bills as soon as June 1.

Even if Mccarthy and Biden can hammer out a broad deal, anything they agree to will need to be shepherded through the House of Representa­tives, where they face pressure from hardliners on both sides not to make too many concession­s.

Further complicati­ng the timeline, the Democratic-controlled Senate is out this week, while the House is slated to be in recess Friday ahead of Memorial Day weekend.

Mchenry, the GOP negotiator, described a "very challengin­g situation" to reach a deal that clears a divided Congress and gets signed into law in the next 10 days.

"I don't want brinksmans­hip. It is not in America's interest," he said.

 ?? AFP/VNA Photo ?? US President Joe Biden meets with US House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy (R-CA) (L) about the debt ceiling, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 22, 2023.
AFP/VNA Photo US President Joe Biden meets with US House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy (R-CA) (L) about the debt ceiling, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 22, 2023.

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