Amid US debt-ceiling standoff, Senate Democrats to dissect Republican
plan
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[May 04, 2023]
By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Republican plan to cut federal spending in
exchange for lifting the federal government's debt ceiling will come
under the microscope Thursday in the U.S. Senate, where President Joe
Biden's Democrats are expected to frame it as a damaging to the economy.
The Senate Budget Committee hearing is the first of several planned by
Democrats, who say legislation that passed the Republican-controlled
House of Representatives last week on a party-line vote would undercut
child care, education and other government programs.
The United States could run out of money to pay its bills as soon as
June 1 if Congress does not raise its self-imposed $31.4 trillion debt
ceiling, according to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.
Republicans say any increase needs to be paired with measures to slow
the growth of the U.S. debt, which has jumped sharply as Washington
spent trillions on COVID-19 relief.
Biden insists that Congress should raise the limit without conditions.
He is due to meet House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and other top lawmakers
at the White House next Tuesday. The standoff is worrying investors, who
have pushed yields on as much as $650 billion of Treasury securities
maturing in the first half of June to record highs after Yellen's
announcement.
The Senate so far has not played a role in the standoff. Republicans
have lined up behind the House proposal. Democrats say they might try to
pass a "clean" debt ceiling hike, but that would be unlikely to win
enough Republican votes for passage.
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A cyclist passes by the U.S. Capitol
building, on the morning of the first day of the 118th Congress in
Washington, DC, U.S., January 3, 2023. REUTERS/Jon Cherry/File Photo
Still, the hearings will provide the sort of legislative scrutiny
that did not take place in the House, where the package was quickly
passed after being assembled by its leadership behind closed doors.
The centerpiece of the House Republican plan would scale back a wide
swath of annual government spending to last year's levels, a cut of
about 8%, and cap its growth by 1% each year after that.
The Republican plan does not specify how individual programs would
fare. Democrats have argued that domestic spending would take the
biggest hit, as Republicans would try to protect military and
veterans programs.
The panel will hear from Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's
Analytics, who warned that the House Republicans' cuts could
contribute to the U.S. economy falling into a recession next year,
potentially pushing unemployment to 6%, from its current
historically low 3.5%.
The head of an environmental group and a solar-industry trade
association are also scheduled to testify, along with Brian Riedl, a
fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute who has advocated
spending restraint.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Scott Malone)
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