2023-06-01 03:40:03
The US House of Representatives has approved the last-minute bill aimed at averting a US default. A majority of lawmakers in the Congress Chamber on Wednesday evening (local time) voted in favor of the bill, which would suspend the US debt ceiling until 2025 while significantly curbing planned government spending over the next two years.
In order for the US government not to run out of money, following the House of Representatives, the Senate must also approve the project and President Joe Biden must sign the law. The time pressure is great: US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen recently warned that insolvency might occur on June 5th – that is, as early as next Monday.
Biden’s government and the Republicans, who have a slim majority in the House of Representatives, had been struggling to find a cross-party compromise in long and difficult negotiations in recent weeks. Many politicians in both Biden’s Democrats and Republicans are dissatisfied with the result, especially on the left and right fringes of both parties. However, in view of the looming US government default, which might trigger a financial and economic crisis with global consequences, MPs from the center of both parties rallied behind the deal and thus ensured the necessary majority for the vote.
314 members voted in favor of the bill in the House of Representatives: 149 Republicans and 165 Democrats. For McCarthy, the vote was an important test. The Republican faced opposition from radical members of his faction. McCarthy was elected chamber leader earlier this year following a historic election mess. The turbulence had greatly weakened his position.
McCarthy now gathered almost two-thirds of his faction behind him in the vote – the Democrats had set this as a bar for the leader of the majority faction in the chamber. At the same time, as expected, dozens of Republicans refused to approve the deal: exactly 71 MPs. In the end, more Democrats than Republicans voted in favor of the compromise, helping the project achieve a whopping bipartisan majority.
For Biden and McCarthy, this is initially a success. The still considerable number of Republican dissenters might nevertheless cause discussions within McCarthy’s already divided faction. One of his critics – Republican Rep. Dan Bishop, who recently floated a no-confidence vote once morest McCarthy – wrote on Twitter following the vote: “This is what it looks like when the single-party cartel betrays the American people.”
In addition, the vote in the Senate is still pending: the Democratic majority leader in the chamber, Chuck Schumer, promised on Wednesday evening to bring the draft to a vote there as quickly as possible in order to anticipate the deadline of an impending default on Monday.
During the debate in the House of Representatives, many MPs from both factions expressed their dissatisfaction and emphasized that it was by no means a perfect compromise, but it was a necessary one. Several Democrats warned that it was regarding saving the country from a disaster that the Republicans had conjured up through their resistance. Several Republicans, on the other hand, emphasized that the draft is the first step in the right direction to curb uncontrolled debt accumulation in the country.
McCarthy complained that excessive spending was also making the United States more dependent on foreign debtors. “Continuing Washington’s spending streak is both irresponsible and just plain wrong,” he warned. The new law will not completely prevent that. But it is a first step to “turn the ship”.
The compromise is intended to effectively freeze the size of the federal budget, which the Democrats under Biden wanted to increase. The budgets of many federal agencies and ministries would be adjusted for this. The Republicans were also able to enforce that recipients of certain social benefits must prove a job. The Democrats actually wanted to increase state revenues by taxing the rich more heavily. The Republicans opposed it.
For some radical Republicans, the cuts in the deal don’t go far enough. Some left-wing Democrats, on the other hand, lament the cuts in social programs. And those moderates in the middle who finally agreed to the deal are not really satisfied either.
Biden stated, “Neither side got everything they wanted.” It is a cross-party compromise. However, the House of Representatives has now taken a decisive step forward in order to prevent a default.
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