U.S. Senate Democrats, Republicans to battle over spending amid bank
collapse
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[March 15, 2023]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate Budget Committee begins debate on
Wednesday over Democratic President Joe Biden's $6.8 trillion budget
proposal, as the collapse of a pair of banks threatens to ratchet higher
the stakes of a partisan standoff on spending and debt.
Biden's proposal is an early step in a negotiation over fiscal 2024
spending with Republicans who control the U.S. House of Representatives,
who say they will refuse to raise the nation's $31.4 trillion debt
ceiling unless Democrats agree to sharp spending cuts.
Failure to do so could lead to an unprecedented default by the federal
government which would rattle the global economy and markets, which have
been volatile following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and
Signature Bank.
White House budget director Shalanda Young will testify about the Biden
plan, which calls for nearly $5 trillion in tax increases on the wealthy
and large corporations to help offset the deficit and shore up Medicare.
Republicans rejected the proposal outright, with the hardline House
Freedom Caucus last week issuing a counterproposal that includes a near
freeze on discretionary spending and an end to multiple Biden programs.
"I want to be clear: America is in real danger due to decades of gross
fiscal mismanagement, but President Biden has done nothing but make this
situation worse," Republican Senator Rick Scott said in an open letter
to Young on Tuesday which pelted her with questions on inflation, job
market participation, interest costs, the future of Social Security and
other issues.
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Sheldon Whitehouse and other Senate
Democrats have said Biden's plan would lower costs for households,
reduce deficits by nearly $3 trillion, protect the Social Security
retirement program and extend the life of the Medicare health insurance
program.
"Republicans have pledged to use draconian cuts to pro-growth
investments for everyday Americans," Whitehouse said in a statement on
Tuesday.
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Director of the Office of Management and
Budget Shalanda Young speaks about U.S. President Joe Biden's budget
plan for fiscal year 2023 during a U.S. Senate Budget Committee
hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., March 30, 2022.
REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
Leaders of both parties say they will not cut Social Security and
Medicare which currently account for about one- third of the federal
budget. Not touching those, or failing to cut defense spending,
leaves little chance of addressing the government's budget deficit.
A presentation by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office to
House lawmakers last week laid out options for addressing the
deficit and projected that spending cuts would have substantially
less effect on the deficit than increased tax collections.
Republicans who control the House of Representatives are working to
release their own budget in coming weeks, which lawmakers have said
could contain up to $150 billion in cuts for domestic nondefense
spending. Republicans are determined to avoid tax hikes and to
preserve tax cuts for the wealthy implemented under former President
Donald Trump.
Forecasters warned on Tuesday that the bank collapses could push
closer the deadline to raise the debt ceiling or risk default.
Experts had recently said the Treasury could stave off a default
until sometime between early June and September, depending on the
federal government's cash balances.
But Democrats and Republicans could have a much shorter time frame
due to the bank collapses, which required the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp to make a record withdrawal of funds from the
Treasury General Account.
(Reporting by David Morgan in Washington; Editing by Scott Malone
and Matthew Lewis)
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