Analysis-How Congress might look for Biden post midterms: The good, bad,
and the ugly
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[October 28, 2022]
By Jeff Mason, Richard Cowan and Heather Timmons
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The midterm
elections in the United States on Nov. 8 will determine whether
Republicans or Democrats control each house of Congress, and the results
will have a profound impact on the next two years of President Joe
Biden's White House tenure.
Here's what could happen next for his administration:
DEMOCRATS KEEP THE SENATE, KEEP THE HOUSE:
This best-case scenario for the Democrats was always considered a long
shot, and forecasters like FiveThirtyEight say there's now just about a
one-in-five chance of Democrats keeping the House of Representatives.
Biden promised to codify abortion rights and pass an assault weapons ban
if his party kept control of Congress, and he would likely double down
on plans to fund child care and community college and revamp
immigration.
However, the first two years of Biden's presidency proved one-party
control of Congress and the White House does not mean the president gets
what he wants. Votes on non-budget issues like abortion and immigration
would still likely need 60 Senate votes to pass the 'filibuster' rule,
and Democrats are divided on funding social programs.
DEMOCRATS HOLD THE SENATE, LOSE THE HOUSE:
This scenario would hobble Biden's presidency by ushering in a flood of
House-led investigations, and likely prevent the passage of any big new
spending bills, which the House can block with a simple majority.
When one political party takes control of a majority of the House's 435
seats, lawmakers from that party become heads of House committees, and
set their agenda.
House Republicans likely to head committees on everything from homeland
security to the judiciary have already said they plan to investigate
Biden cabinet members and COVID-19 funds; others want to take aim at his
son Hunter's overseas work and the FBI's investigation of former
President Donald Trump.
The House can start impeachment proceedings, and some Republicans have
said they'd like to impeach Biden, though the "treason, bribery, or
other high crimes and misdemeanors" he would be charged with are
unclear. Any impeachment would then progress to a trial in the Senate,
where a Democratic majority is likely to shut it down.
Republicans have also pledged to flex their new muscles in the House by
proposing spending cuts to Biden priorities such as multibillion
dollars' worth of military aid to Ukraine or environmental initiatives.
They would likely use the threat of partial government agency shutdowns
or refuse to raise the debt ceiling if a Democratic-led Senate spurns
their initiatives.
The first shots could be fired early in the 118th Congress that begins
Jan. 3 over funding the government for the remainder of the fiscal year,
or through Sept. 30.
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U.S. President Joe Biden waves as he
departs Joint Base Andrews for upstate New York, in Maryland, U.S.,
October 27, 2022. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
A more heated fiscal battle comes later in 2023 when the U.S.
Treasury Department is expected to breach its $31.4 trillion
borrowing limit. If a debt limit increase is not enacted by Congress
in a timely way, Washington would descend into an historic default
that could send global financial markets and economies reeling.
Retaining their hair-thin control of the Senate would give Democrats
the power to keep appointing judges at a rapid clip and curb House
Republicans' ability to roll back Biden's agenda and pursue their
own. The Senate Majority Leader, picked from the party that holds a
majority of the Senate's 100 seats, decides what the chamber votes
on, or never considers.
DEMOCRATS LOSE THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
The worst-case scenario for Biden and his party would likely see his
agenda completely frozen for the next two years, a Republican focus
on unwinding legislation passed during his first two years and maybe
an impeachment trial.
Republicans likely would push hard for deep domestic spending cuts
and making some tax cuts from the 2017 tax bill set to expire at the
end of 2025 permanent. Some have suggested "reforming" the gigantic
Social Security program for retirees and Medicare health insurance
for the elderly and disabled
Tempering those efforts, Biden will have the power of the
presidential veto to block legislation and attempts to roll back his
agenda. Bills that pass Congress go to the U.S. president to sign
into law, and he has already pledged to use the veto, including on
any bill that makes abortion illegal nationwide.
Overriding his veto takes a two-thirds majority in the House and the
Senate, and Republicans are unlikely to have a big enough majority
to make that happen.
Republicans are not expected to win enough Senate seats on Nov. 8 to
overcome the 60-vote filibuster, making bills on abortion or
immigration hard to pass in the first place.
However, Republicans could employ a special "reconciliation"
procedure for tax and budget-related measures that both parties have
used to advance their agendas in the deeply divided Congress.
Whether a House Biden impeachment process proceeds to a Senate trial
would rest on the shoulders of the Senate Majority Leader, likely to
be Kentucky's Mitch McConnell. McConnell has already pledged to
block any Biden Supreme Court pick in 2024 if he's in charge.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and Jeff Mason; Writing by Heather
Timmons; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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