U.S. public sees no clear winner in debt ceiling deal -Reuters/Ipsos
poll
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[June 06, 2023]
By Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Neither President Joe Biden's Democrats nor
Republicans in Congress emerged as a clear winner in the battle to raise
the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll.
The survey, conducted after Congress passed a bipartisan deal to raise
the borrowing limit, found that 50% of Americans thought neither party
emerged as a winner, while another 20% said both sides won.
Another 20% said they thought Democrats emerged with the better side of
the deal, while 11% said Republicans had done better, according to the
four-day poll which concluded on Monday.
The poll found self-identified Democrats were more likely to be
satisfied with the outcome. Some 80% of Democrats liked how President
Joe Biden handled their side's end of the talks, while just 13% took a
dim view of Biden's performance.
By contrast, only 44% of Republicans approved of how their party's top
congressional official, U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, drove the
bargain for Republicans. Forty-two percent disapproved.
McCarthy's poor marks reflect the deep divisions within his party.
Hard-line Republicans who sought deeper government spending cuts in the
talks have warned that McCarthy's job could be in danger.
Biden and McCarthy reached a deal last week to suspend the debt ceiling
weeks of negotiations between Biden's White House and Republicans who
control the House of Representatives.
Biden signed the deal into law on Saturday, averting the financial
disaster that would have unfolded if Washington were forced to stop
paying all its bills.
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The U.S. Capitol Dome is illuminated as
the Senate votes on debt ceiling legislation to avoid a historic
default at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., June 1, 2023.
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
Politicians on both sides have presented the deal as a victory, with
Republicans touting a reduction in non-military spending. Biden said
the compromises in the deal were a sign the polarized nation could
bridge its political divides.
Critics of the deal on the right said the cuts did not go far
enough, while progressives criticized increased work requirements
for struggling Americans receiving food or monetary assistance and
provisions streamlining approvals for fossil fuel projects amid a
climate change crisis.
The deal would cut spending by $1.3 trillion, less than the $4.8
trillion Republicans had sought. It does little to slow growth in
federal debt that is on pace to exceed $50 trillion in a decade.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll surveyed 1,004 U.S. adults nationwide and had
a credibility interval, a measure of precision, of about 4% in
either direction.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; editing by Andy Sullivan and Aurora
Ellis)
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