As the Washington Post reports today, President Joe Biden along with the Democratic majority in the U.S. Senate have declared the GOP-controlled House’s demands in exchange for the next routine hike in the nation’s debt limit a nonstarter:
President Biden on Wednesday rejected a Republican plan to slash government spending and raise the debt limit, assailing the proposals as “wacko” notions that would cause a catastrophic government default.
Moments after Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) discussed the GOP plan on the House floor, the president stood in a Maryland union hall, insisting that Congress pass a stand-alone bill to raise the debt limit — as Republicans did three times during the Trump administration…
McCarthy had delivered a speech on Wall Street on Monday, and Biden said, “he proposed huge cuts to important programs that millions of working- and middle-class Americans count on.” The president said the GOP proposal would result in cuts to the number of people who administer Social Security and Medicare, causing longer wait times; and higher costs for child care.
As Politico reports, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s proposal is every bit the horror show forecast over the weekend, seemingly written to ensure Senate Democrats can’t possibly support it:
The GOP plan aims to repeal a swath of clean energy tax credits, in addition to yanking back tens of billions of dollars that Democrats included for IRS enforcement in their signature tax, climate and health care bill last year. The proposal would also end Biden’s pause on student loan payments and interest, block his student loan forgiveness plan and increase work requirements for “able-bodied adults without dependents” receiving SNAP benefits.
The question now is whether McCarthy even has the votes to pass this with his narrow House majority, which as a result of displeasure on both flanks he may not. If McCarthy can’t even get this plan out of his own chamber, obviously it’s a massive humiliation. But even if he does, McCarthy’s plan is DOA in the Senate and we’re back at proverbial square one.
Meanwhile, as The Hill reports, the ubiquitary centrist-branded “Problem Solvers Caucus” are at work on their own plan for a clean-ish debt ceiling hike, which could split the GOP and even attract Democratic support–combined with a special 2011-style “commission” to look at “responsible budget reform measures” outside the high-pressure environment of an impending debt ceiling deadline:
A “framework” of that proposal, released on Wednesday, reveals a bare-bones outline of the group’s fiscal wish list, featuring a suspension of the debt limit through the end of the calendar year — to stave off a government default while Congress negotiates its 2024 budget — and the creation of an outside commission designed to rein in deficit spending and reduce the country’s $31.5 trillion debt over the long haul.
At this point, it’s difficult to see McCarthy’s path forward to anything Republicans can characterize as a win. If in the worst case the nation does default and economic chaos ensues, McCarthy’s ill-advised brinksmanship is wholly to blame. If McCarthy makes a deal that Democrats can support, it could cost him his speakership via rebellion on his right flank. If the Senate and White House make an end run around McCarthy completely by brokering a deal outside his office, that’s nearly as bad for McCarthy personally.
Just like a decade ago, this manufactured crisis with real peril for the national economy goes on because Republicans with just enough power to cause the crisis want it to continue, and it can end as soon they want it to stop. The question of who gets the blame for any negative consequences begins and ends with this simple fact.
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