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Congress sends Biden $2.5-trillion debt limit hike, avoiding default

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of N.Y.
Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) speaks during a news conference Dec. 7 on Capitol Hill.
(Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press )
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Congress averted a catastrophic debt default early Wednesday morning after Democratic majorities in both chambers voted to send a $2.5-trillion increase in the nation’s borrowing authority to President Biden, over lockstep Republican opposition.

Capping a marathon day, the House gave final approval to the legislation early Wednesday morning on a near-party-line vote of 221-209, defusing a volatile issue until after the 2022 midterm elections. The action came just hours shy of a deadline set by Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen, who warned last month that she was running out of maneuvering room to avoid the nation’s first-ever default.

“The full faith and credit of the United States should never be questioned,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi said from the House floor shortly before the vote.

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Yet the bill — which drew only one Republican vote in the House, from Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger — also saddled vulnerable Democrats with a tough vote on the cusp of an election year when both chambers will be up for grabs.

Republicans, meanwhile, said they were perplexed by the Democrats’ scramble to act.

“Democrats have known this day is coming for two years and did absolutely nothing,” said Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas).

The semi-regular debt limit fight is politics at its worst.

Despite a seemingly straightforward name, the nation’s debt limit does little to curtail future debt. Established in 1917, it instead serves as a brake on spending decisions already approved by Congress and the White House — some from decades ago — that if left unpaid could cripple markets, send the economy into a tailspin and shake global confidence in the United States.

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That hasn’t stopped the saber-rattling by Republicans. For months, they’ve used the debt limit to attack Democrats’ big-spending social and environmental agenda while pledging to staunchly oppose the current effort to increase the threshold. As recently as October, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said he would not “be a party to any future effort to mitigate the consequences of Democratic mismanagement.”

Yet McConnell softened his opposition, striking a deal last week with Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) that created a workaround that allowed Senate Democrats to approve legislation with a simple majority while avoiding a Republican filibuster.

“This is about paying debt accumulated by both parties,” Schumer said Tuesday while hailing the agreement.

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McConnell’s backtracking angered some in his party. But it also gave him much of what he wanted: Democrats taking a politically difficult vote without Republican support, while increasing the limit by a staggering amount that is sure to appear in future attack ads.

“If they jam through another taxing and spending spree, this massive debt increase will just be the beginning,” McConnell said Tuesday.

The decision, however, has proved unpopular with some Republicans, particularly former President Trump.

He has railed against the deal repeatedly, calling McConnell a “broken old crow” who “didn’t have the guts to play the debt ceiling card, which would have given the Republicans a complete victory on virtually everything.”

“GET RID OF MITCH!” Trump said in a statement issued Sunday.

Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) also criticized the intricate process Schumer and McConnell agreed to, which he warned could be used in the future to “launder” potentially unpopular votes while bypassing the Senate’s normal mode of operation.

Under the agreement, an amendment was made to an unrelated Medicare bill that passed last week with Republican votes. It created a one-time, fast-track process for raising the debt limit that allowed Democrats to do so with a simple majority, bypassing the 60-vote threshold to avoid a GOP filibuster.

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Lee said the process was intended to make the Republican votes last week “appear as something other than helping Democrats raise the debt ceiling,” which he said Republican leadership “committed, in writing no less, not to do.”

Yet Republican arguments against debt limit increases often ignore inconvenient facts.

The nation’s current debt load of $28.9 trillion has been racking up for decades. Major drivers include popular spending programs, such as Social Security and Medicare, interest on the debt and recent COVID-19 relief packages. But taxation is also a major factor, and a series of tax cuts enacted by Republican presidents in recent decades has added to it as well.

The national debt includes $7.8 trillion heaped onto the pile during Trump’s four-year presidency, an analysis of Treasury records shows. The GOP-championed 2017 tax cut is projected to add between $1 trillion and $2 trillion to the debt, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center.

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