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THE RESET

Debt limit looms as next fiscal cliff

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[December 12, 2102]   (AP) -- We now know what's on the other side of that menacing year-end "fiscal cliff." Another cliff.

While White House and Republican congressional leaders labor behind closed doors to cut a deal to steer clear of the first cliff -- mandatory tax increases and spending cuts due to hit in early January -- another treacherous economic precipice looms.

It's when the government will again bump up against the congressionally-set debt ceiling.

The debt limit has been a growing source of acrimony between presidents and opposition parties.

As a senator, Barack Obama voted against a 2006 debt-limit request by President George W. Bush, calling it "a sign of leadership failure." Bush won that one.

The last debt-limit standoff came in August 2011, and the drawn-out gamesmanship cost the U.S. a first-ever credit downgrade.

The current statutory limit on the government's borrowing authority of $16.4 trillion will technically be reached in late December, but likely can be put off until mid-February through accounting maneuvers.

Obama has asked Congress for authority to raise the debt limit without prior approval. But Republicans seem unlikely to give up that bargaining chip.

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"Republicans know that they have the debt ceiling that's coming up right around the corner and the leverage is going to shift as soon as we get beyond this (fiscal cliff) issue," says Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee. And he's a Republican who's sympathetic to Obama's plan to raise taxes on the wealthy.

President Ronald Reagan holds the modern record. He raised the debt limit 18 times and once complained of "conservative Republicans who are playing games. ...We must have that bill or government checks will start bouncing."

President George H.W. Bush raised it four times, Bill Clinton four times, the younger Bush seven times and Obama, so far, four times.

[Associated Press; By TOM RAUM]

Follow Tom Raum on Twitter: http://twitter.com/tomraum.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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