As Congress deals with
battles over health care legislation and the budget this summer, it is looking
more and more likely that a fight over raising the country’s debt ceiling will
be added to its agenda.
The debt ceiling is a
cap on how much the U.S. Treasury can borrow to pay for government expenses,
and it can only be altered by an act of Congress. Lawmakers had been hoping
they could put off dealing with it until the fall.
But key figures within
the Trump administration are asking Congress to take action as soon as next
month, saying that tax revenue has been less than expected. The Treasury
Department’s power to actually borrow money ran out in March, and it has been
operating since then with its cash on hand.
“We need to make sure
we raise our debt ceiling to pay our debts,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin
told a House subcommittee last week.
“My understanding is
that the receipts currently are coming in a little bit slower than expected,
and you may soon hear from [Mnuchin] regarding a change in the date,” Mick
Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget, told a separate
House panel.
Republicans have
acknowledged the need to raise the debt ceiling but are hesitant to commit to a
vote before they recess in late July.
“We have to do it. We
can’t let the government default,” Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, told Politico.
A vote on the debt
limit could be another headache for Republican leadership, however, as it comes
in addition to other hotly contested policy debates. House Speaker Paul Ryan,
R-Wis., and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., will have to
reconcile vastly different views on the topic within their caucuses.
This is because the
most conservative members of the House, known as the Freedom Caucus, have
already signaled that they will demand spending cuts as part of any bill to
raise the debt ceiling. Other Republicans, as well as most Democrats, want what
is called a “clean” increase with no strings attached.
“We oppose any clean
raising of the debt ceiling, we call for the debt ceiling to be addressed by
Congress prior to the August Recess, and we demand that any increase of the
debt ceiling be paired with policy that addresses Washington’s unsustainable
spending by cutting where necessary, capping where able, and working to balance
in the near future,” the caucus wrote in an official statement.
Widespread opposition
from the most conservative members of the caucus could force Ryan and McConnell
to seek Democratic help in pushing a bill to passage. Some measure of
bipartisan support will already be required to clear the 60-vote threshold to
squelch a filibuster in the Senate, since Republicans have only 52 members in
that house.
View photos
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell, center, arrives to talk to the media in Washington on May 23.
(Photo: Yuri Gripas/Reuters)
While Democrats in
both the Senate and House routinely voted to raise the borrowing limit under
President Barack Obama, some members are indicating that they will look to use
their leverage to get policy concessions from across the aisle.
“We should consider
what additional conditions we might want to consider imposing,” Sen. Richard
Blumenthal, D-Conn., told Politico.
Other Democrats are
willing to pass a clean increase.
“The Republican
majority should pass a clean debt limit increase and not risk the full faith
and credit of the United States,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.,
said in a statement.
This will not be the
first tussle over the debt ceiling. In 2011, Republicans brought the nation to
the brink of default after insisting that any increase in borrowing be coupled
with major spending cuts. Negotiations on the issue lasted for more than six
months before Obama and congressional Republicans reached a deal in August.
The deadlock resulted
in the first-ever credit downgrade for the U.S. government. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average fell nearly 2,000 points over the course of the summer, in
part because of the uncertainty that was created.
An increase in the
debt ceiling in 2013 was comparatively uncontroversial.
If the debt ceiling is not raised, the
Treasury Department can undertake what are known as “extraordinary measures,”
such as suspending the sale of Treasury securities, to avoid a government
shutdown. Once those are exhausted, the government would be unable to meet its
obligations and could default, with consequences impossible to predict.
No comments:
Post a Comment