Obama
wins U.S. debt-limit, budget truce through end of
presidency
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[October 30, 2015]
By David Lawder and Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Barack Obama early Friday won congressional passage of legislation that
lifted the threat of a default on government debt through the end of his
presidency and a budget blueprint easing strict spending caps through
September 2017.
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The Senate voted 64-35 to approve the measure, which was negotiated
over the past few weeks by the White House and congressional
leaders, including former House Speaker John Boehner, who retired
from Congress.
Obama will sign the bill into law as soon as he receives it, the
White House said in a statement.
Without action by Congress, the Treasury Department would have
exhausted the last of its borrowing capacity on Nov. 3, according to
Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, and risked default on U.S. obligations
within days that would roil global financial markets.
The two-year budget provision provides new top-line spending levels
for Congress for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1 and the one
starting Oct. 1, 2016.
It loosens budget caps, allowing an additional $80 billion in
spending on military and domestic programs over the two years.
But lawmakers still need to allocate that money among thousands of
budget-line items. They face a Dec. 11 deadline, when existing
spending authority by government agencies expires, and a spirited
fight is expected.
Obama called on Congress to build on the budget "by getting to work
on spending bills that invest in America’s priorities without
getting sidetracked by ideological provisions that have no place in
America’s budget process."
Conservative Republicans are likely to try to attach controversial
policy add-ons, such as prohibiting funding for women's healthcare
provider Planned Parenthood to punish the group for an
abortion-related controversy involving fetal tissue.
Some may also try to undo Dodd-Frank Wall Street reforms enacted
after the 2008-09 financial crisis or prohibit new regulations on
carbon emissions.
During Senate debate on Thursday, conservatives railed against the
budget and debt limit bill.
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Republican Senator Rand Paul, who is running for the Republican
nomination for president, complained in a floor speech: "The right's
going to get more military money. The left's going to get more
welfare money. The secret handshake goes on and the American public
gets stuck with the bill."
Senator Ted Cruz, a rival Republican presidential hopeful, returned
to Washington from the campaign trail to accuse Republican
majorities in Congress of "handing the president a blank credit card
for the remainder of his tenure."
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican who helped
negotiate the bill, praised the measure for rejecting tax increases
and noted that the added spending would be offset by savings
elsewhere in the government.
He also said it would "enact the most significant reform to Social
Security since 1983." The estimated $168 billion in long-term
savings from the program would be achieved by clamping down on
medical fraud and excess claims associated with disability benefits.
See Factbox:
(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan and Susan Heavey; Editing by
Larry King and Jeffrey Benkoe)
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