House Passes Debt Limit Bill in Bipartisan Vote to Avert Default
An
overwhelming bipartisan coalition pushed through the compromise struck by Speaker
Kevin McCarthy and President Biden, even as lawmakers in both parties signaled displeasure with the plan.
The House on Wednesday (31.05.2023)
overwhelmingly passed legislation negotiated by President Biden and Speaker Kevin
McCarthy to suspend the debt ceiling and set federal spending limits, as a broad
bipartisan coalition lined up to cast a critical vote to pull the nation back from
the brink of economic catastrophe.
The bill would defer the federal
debt limit for two years — allowing the government to borrow unlimited sums as necessary
to pay its obligations — while imposing two years of spending caps and a string
of policy changes that Republicans demanded in exchange for allowing the country
to avoid a disastrous default. The 314-to-117 vote came days before the nation was
set to exhaust its borrowing limit, and days after a marathon set of talks between
White House negotiators and top House Republicans yielded a breakthrough agreement.
With both far-right and hard-left
lawmakers in revolt over the deal, it fell to a bipartisan coalition powered by
Democrats to push the bill over the finish line, throwing their support behind the
compromise in an effort to break the fiscal stalemate that had gripped Washington
for weeks. On the final vote, 149 Republicans and 165 Democrats backed the measure,
while 71 Republicans and 46 Democrats opposed it.
That was a blow to the Republican
speaker, whose hard-fought victory on the measure was dampened by the fact that
more Democrats ultimately voted for the bill than members of his own party.
The measure nearly collapsed
on its way to the House floor, when hard-right Republicans sought to block its consideration,
and in a suspenseful scene, Democrats waited several minutes before swooping in
to supply their votes for a procedural measure that allowed the plan to move ahead.
The deal would suspend the $31.4
trillion borrowing limit until January 2025. It would cut federal spending by $1.5
trillion over a decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office, by effectively
freezing some funding that had been projected to increase next year and then limiting
spending to 1 percent growth in 2025, which is considered a cut because it would
be at a lower level than inflation. The legislation would also impose stricter work
requirements for food stamps, claw back some funding for I.R.S. enforcement and
unspent coronavirus relief money, speed the permitting of new energy projects and
officially end Mr. Biden’s student loan repayment freeze.
The compromise was structured
with the aim of enticing votes from both parties. It allowed Republicans, who refused
to raise the debt ceiling and avert a default without conditions, to say that they
succeeded in reducing some federal spending — even as funding for the military and
veterans’ programs would continue to grow — while allowing Democrats to say they
spared most domestic programs from the severe cuts.
Mr. McCarthy framed the bill
on Wednesday as a “small step putting us on the right track” and urged his members
to support it.
“We’re finally bending the curve
on discretionary spending because of this bill, and we’re doing it while at the
same time raising our national defense and our veterans
fully funded, with Social Security and Medicare preserved,” Mr. McCarthy said in
a speech on the House floor, adding, “That is a major victory.”
Representative Hakeem Jeffries,
Democrat of New York and the minority leader, described the deal as a vital step
and thanked Democrats for their “efforts to make sure that we push back the extreme
MAGA Republican efforts to jam right-wing cuts down the throats of the American
people.”
“From the very beginning, House
Democrats were clear that we would not allow extreme MAGA Republicans to default
on our debt, crash the economy or trigger a job-killing recession,” Mr. Jeffries
said. “Under the leadership of President Joe Biden, Democrats kept our promise.”
Mr. Biden lauded the bill’s passage
as a “critical step forward to prevent a first-ever default.”
“This budget agreement is a bipartisan
compromise,” Mr. Biden, who called congressional leaders after the vote, said in
a statement. “Neither side got everything it wanted.”
Not long after the bill passed
the House, Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the majority leader,
moved to speed it to the floor in that chamber, where it was expected to get quick
consideration. Mr. Schumer warned earlier in the day that senators would need to
approve the bill without changes to meet the June 5 deadline when the Treasury Secretary
Janet L. Yellen has said the government would default without action by Congress.
“I cannot stress enough that
we have no margin for error,” he said. “Either we proceed quickly and send this
bipartisan agreement to the president’s desk or the federal government will default
for the first time ever.”
The vote on Wednesday was a major
victory for Mr. McCarthy, the California Republican, who faced a vast challenge
in shepherding a debt ceiling increase through a narrowly divided chamber populated
by Republicans who have long refused to raise the borrowing limit. Few had expected
that Mr. McCarthy would be able to unite his fractious conference around any such
measure, much less one negotiated with Mr. Biden, without prompting an attempt by
his right flank to oust him.
As of Wednesday, no such effort
had materialized, though there still may be political consequences ahead for Mr.
McCarthy after a vote that reflected the depth of Republican opposition to the deal
he cut.
“I’m not suggesting the votes
are there to remove the speaker, but the speaker promised that we would operate
at 2022 appropriations levels when he got the support to be speaker,” Mr. Buck said.
“He’s now changed that to 2023 levels plus one percent. That’s a major change for
a lot of people.”
Under the rules House Republicans
adopted at the beginning of the year that helped Mr. McCarthy become speaker, any
single lawmaker could call for a snap vote to depose him, a move that would require
a majority of the House.
Hard-right lawmakers were furious
over the compromise, savaging the bill and Mr. McCarthy’s handling of the negotiations
as a betrayal.
“No one sent us here to borrow
an additional $4 trillion to get absolutely nothing in return,” said Representative
Chip Roy, Republican of Texas, who promised “a reckoning about what just occurred.”
In a display of their displeasure,
29 conservative Republicans took the unusual step of breaking ranks on a procedural
vote to take up the legislation, normally a formality that passes entirely along
party lines.
In a dramatic tableau on the
House floor, as the Republican defections piled up, imperiling
the deal, Mr. Jeffries finally raised a green voting card in the air, signaling to fellow Democrats that it was time to go ahead and
bail Republicans out. A stream of centrist and veteran Democrats — 52 in all — crowded
into the well of the House and voted “yes,” rescuing the deal from collapse.
In the final vote on the bill,
Mr. McCarthy was able to muster roughly two thirds of Republican votes for the plan
— meeting the goal he set — while a huge bloc of Democrats rallied to support it.
But progressive Democrats
bristled at the bill, and some said they could not support new work requirements
for safety net programs or reward Republicans’ use of the debt ceiling as a
political cudgel.
“Republicans need to own
this vote,” said Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Democrat of New York,
who took particular aim at changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program and a measure to expedite production of a gas pipeline. “This was their
deal. This was their negotiations. They’re the ones trying to come in and cut
SNAP, cut environmental protections, trying to ram through an oil pipeline
through a community that does not want it.”
“This has been a hostage
situation,” Representative Greg Casar of Texas said.
“We’re going to get out of the hostage situation. I appreciate the president
negotiating down the ransom payment for the hostage. But I think it’s
appropriate for progressives to say we never want to be in this situation
again.”
Adding to progressive
discontent are provisions in the deal that claw back some unspent money from a
previous pandemic relief bill, and reduce by $10 billion — to $70 billion from
$80 billion — new enforcement funding for the I.R.S. to crack down on tax
cheats. They also were up in arms over measures meant to speed permitting of
energy projects and to force the president to find budget savings to offset the
costs of a unilateral action, like forgiving student loans — though
administration officials could circumvent that requirement.
The deal also includes
measures meant to avert a government shutdown later this year.
Hard-right Republicans like
Mr. Bishop described those provisions as “crumbs,” saying that Mr. McCarthy had
failed to win the kind of deep spending cuts the conference had laid out in the
debt limit bill the House passed in April. That measure would have cut
government programs by an average of 18 percent over a decade in exchange for
raising the debt limit.