Morrow County Sentinel.com

House votes to defuse debt limit crisis

Jan 23, 1:59 PM ESTWASHINGTON (AP) — The House over­whelm­ingly passed a bill Wednes­day to per­mit the gov­ern­ment to bor­row enough money to avoid a first-time default for at least four months, defus­ing a loom­ing cri­sis set­ting up a spring­time debate over taxes, spend­ing and the deficit.

The House passed the mea­sure on a bipar­ti­san 285–144 vote as major­ity Repub­li­cans back away from their pre­vi­ous demand that any increase in the government’s bor­row­ing cap be paired with an equiv­a­lent level of spend­ing cuts.

Sen­ate Major­ity Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the cham­ber would imme­di­ately move to advance the leg­is­la­tion to the White House, which has announced Obama would sign it.

The mea­sure would sus­pend the $16.4 tril­lion cap on fed­eral bor­row­ing and reset it on May 19 to reflect the addi­tional bor­row­ing required between the date the bill becomes law and then. The amount of bor­row­ing required depends on the tax receipts received dur­ing fil­ing sea­son, but over a com­pa­ra­ble period last year the gov­ern­ment ran deficits in the range of $150 billion.

The mea­sure also con­tains a pro­vi­sion that slaps at the Sen­ate, which hasn’t debated a bud­get since 2009, by with­hold­ing the pay for either House or Sen­ate mem­bers if the cham­ber in which they serve fails to pass a bud­get plan. Sen. Patty Mur­ray, D-Wash., announced Wednes­day that the cham­ber would indeed debate a bud­get this year but main­tained the GOP’s “no bud­get, no pay” move had noth­ing to do with the decision.

Pres­i­dent Barack Obama vows not to nego­ti­ate over the debt ceil­ing as he did in the sum­mer of 2011, though he promises fur­ther action on the bud­get. Wednesday’s devel­op­ments mark a shift of the bud­get debate away from failed head-to-head talks between Obama and Boehner

The idea dri­ving the move by GOP lead­ers like Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, is to re-sequence a series of upcom­ing bud­get bat­tles, tak­ing the threat of a poten­tially dev­as­tat­ing gov­ern­ment default off the table and instead set­ting up a clash in March over auto­matic across-the-board spend­ing cuts set to strike the Pen­ta­gon and many domes­tic pro­grams. Those cuts — post­poned by the recent “fis­cal cliff” deal — are the pun­ish­ment for the fail­ure of a 2011 con­gres­sional deficit-reduction super­com­mit­tee to reach an agreement.

This “no bud­get, no pay” idea had pre­vi­ously been regarded by many as a gim­mick but has been given new life by Boehner as a “reform” to pair with an increase in the so-called debt limit. Boehner pre­vi­ously had insisted that any increase in bor­row­ing author­ity to avoid lapses in pay­ments to con­trac­tors, unem­ploy­ment ben­e­fits or Social Secu­rity checks — and pos­si­bly even inter­est pay­ments on U.S. Trea­sury oblig­a­tions — be matched dol­lar for dol­lar with spend­ing cuts. Many Repub­li­can speak­ers pre­ferred to focus on the pay provision.

This is not a gim­mick,” said Rep. Michael Fitz­patrick, R-Pa. “For the past almost going on now four years, our col­leagues in the Sen­ate have failed in their most basic respon­si­bil­ity of gov­er­nance, which is to pass a budget.”

All we’re say­ing is ‘Con­gress fol­low the law. Do your work. Bud­get,’” said House Bud­get Com­mit­tee Chair­man Paul Ryan, R-Wis. “And the rea­son for this (debt) exten­sion is so that we can have the (bud­get) debate we need to have.”

Boehner promises that the GOP blue­print will project a bal­anced bud­get at the end of a 10-year window.

Bal­anc­ing the bud­get over the next 10 years means that we save the future for our kids and our grand­kids,” Boehner said. “It also means that we strengthen pro­grams like Social Secu­rity and Medicare and Med­ic­aid that can’t con­tinue to exist in their cur­rent form with­out some kind of controls.”

But the White House weighed in Tues­day with a state­ment that the admin­is­tra­tion would not oppose the debt mea­sure, even though Obama just last week dis­missed incre­men­tal increases in the debt ceil­ing as harm­ful to the economy.

It also appeared vir­tu­ally cer­tain that Sen­ate Democ­rats would accept the bill even though they would pre­fer a longer-term solu­tion to the debt issue and believe that the “no bud­get, no pay” pro­vi­sion is silly.

While the mea­sure per­mits an unde­ter­mined amount of addi­tional bor­row­ing through May 18, the actual date in which the gov­ern­ment might be at risk of default­ing on its oblig­a­tions would be sev­eral weeks later. That’s because the gov­ern­ment would retain the abil­ity to jug­gle its books through what the Trea­sury Depart­ment calls “extra­or­di­nary measures.”

With the debt bat­tle averted, the next fight comes in March over across-the-board cuts that would pare $85 bil­lion from this year’s bud­get. They were delayed from Jan. 1 until March 1 and reduced by $24 bil­lion by the recently enacted tax bill. Defense hawks are par­tic­u­larly upset, say­ing the Pen­ta­gon cuts would dev­as­tate mil­i­tary readi­ness and cause havoc in defense con­tract­ing. The cuts, called a sequester in Washington-speak, were never intended to take effect but were instead aimed at dri­ving the two sides to a large bud­get bar­gain in order to avoid them.

But Repub­li­cans and Obama now appear on a col­li­sion course over how to replace the across-the-board cuts. Obama and his Demo­c­ra­tic allies insist that addi­tional rev­enues be part of the solu­tion; Repub­li­cans say fur­ther tax increases are off the table after the 10-year, $600 billion-plus increase in taxes on wealth­ier earn­ers forced upon Repub­li­cans by Obama ear­lier this month.

We are not going to raise taxes on the Amer­i­can peo­ple,” Boehner told reporters Tuesday.

Accord­ing to the lat­est cal­cu­la­tions, which account for the recent reduc­tion of this year’s sequester from $109 bil­lion to $85 bil­lion, the Pen­ta­gon now faces a 7.3 per­cent across-the-board cut, while domes­tic agency bud­gets would absorb a 5.1 per­cent cut. The cal­cu­la­tions are not offi­cial but were released Tues­day by Richard Kogan, a bud­get expert with the Cen­ter on Bud­get and Pol­icy Pri­or­i­ties think tank.

Randa Wagner Posted by on Jan 23 2013. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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