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		Biden, McCarthy appear near two-year deal on US debt ceiling as default 
		looms
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		 [May 26, 2023]  
		By Nandita Bose, Jarrett Renshaw and David Morgan 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden and top congressional 
		Republican Kevin McCarthy are closing in on a deal that would raise the 
		government's $31.4 trillion debt ceiling for two years while capping 
		spending on most items, a U.S. official told Reuters.
 
 The deal, which is not final, would increase funding for discretionary 
		spending on military and veterans while essentially holding non-defense 
		discretionary spending at current year levels, the official said, who 
		requested anonymity because they are not authorized to speak about 
		internal discussions.
 
 The White House is considering scaling back its plan to boost funding at 
		the Internal Revenue Service to hire more auditors and target wealthy 
		Americans, the official said.
 
 A second U.S. official said IRS funding is an open issue, but the main 
		thrust is ensuring the agency executes the president's priorities, even 
		if there is a small haircut or funding is moved around.
 
		
		 
		The final deal would specify the total amount the government could spend 
		on discretionary programs like housing and education, according to a 
		person familiar with the talks, but not break that down into individual 
		categories. The two sides are just $70 billion apart on a total figure 
		that would be well over $1 trillion, according to another source.
 The two sides met virtually on Thursday, the White House said.
 
 Republican negotiators have backed off plans to increase military 
		spending while cutting non-defense spending and instead backed a White 
		House push to treat both budget items more equally, a source familiar 
		with the talks told Reuters.
 
 Biden said they still disagreed over where the cuts should fall.
 
 "I don't believe the whole burden should fall back to middle class and 
		working-class Americans," he told reporters.
 
 House Speaker McCarthy told reporters Thursday evening the two sides 
		have not reached a deal. "We knew this would not be easy," he said.
 
 It is unclear precisely how much time Congress has left to act. The 
		Treasury Department was warned that it could be unable to cover all its 
		obligations as soon as June 1, but on Thursday said it would sell $119 
		billion worth of debt that will come due on that date, suggesting to 
		some market watchers that it was not an iron-clad deadline.
 
 "They have suggested in the past that they would not announce auctions 
		that they did not believe they had the means to settle," Gennadiy 
		Goldberg, senior rates strategist at TD Securities in New York. "So I do 
		think that's a positive note."
 
 Any agreement will have to pass the Republican-controlled House of 
		Representatives and the Democratic-controlled Senate. That could be 
		tricky, as some right-wing Republicans and many liberal Democrats said 
		they were upset by the prospect of compromise.
 
 "I don't think everybody's going to be happy at the end of the day. 
		That's not how the system works," McCarthy said.
 
 The House adjourned on Thursday afternoon for a week-long break, and the 
		Senate is not in session. Lawmakers have been told to be ready to come 
		back to vote if a deal is reached.
 
 The deal would only set broad spending outlines, leaving lawmakers to 
		fill in the blanks in the weeks and months to come.
 
		
		 
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            U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) 
			speaks with reporters at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S. May 
			24, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst 
            
			 
            Biden has resisted Republican proposals to stiffen work requirements 
			for anti-poverty programs and loosen oil and gas drilling rules, 
			according to Democratic Representative Mark Takano. 
 Representative Kevin Hern, who leads the powerful Republican Study 
			Committee, told Reuters a deal was likely by Friday afternoon.
 
 'TIME'S UP'
 
 Democrats on Thursday focused their attacks on what they said would 
			be devastating cuts in federal aid for veterans - ranging from 
			healthcare and food aid to housing assistance - if Republicans got 
			their way in the negotiations.
 
 "Time's up for all of these games around here," Democratic 
			Representative Don Davis, a U.S. Air Force veteran, said at a press 
			conference.
 
 A U.S. default could upend global financial markets and push the 
			United States into recession.
 
 Credit rating agency DBRS Morningstar put the United States on 
			review for a possible downgrade on Thursday, echoing similar 
			warnings by Fitch, Moody's and Scope Ratings. Another agency, S&P 
			Global, downgraded U.S. debt following a similar debt-ceiling 
			standoff in 2011.
 
 The months-long standoff has spooked Wall Street, weighing on U.S. 
			stocks and pushing the nation's cost of borrowing higher.
 
 Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said concerns about the debt 
			ceiling had pushed up the government's interest costs by $80 million 
			so far.
 
 Lawmakers regularly need to raise the self-imposed debt limit to 
			cover the cost of spending and tax cuts they have already approved.
 
 House lawmakers will get three days to read any debt-ceiling bill 
			before they have to vote on it.
 
 McCarthy has insisted that any deal must cut discretionary spending 
			next year and cap spending growth in the years to come, to slow the 
			growth of the U.S. debt, now equal to the annual output of the 
			economy.
 
            
			 
			Lawmakers on the parties' right and left flanks are growing 
			frustrated. Republican Representative Chip Roy, a member of the 
			hard-right Freedom Caucus, has insisted that any deal must include 
			the sharp spending cuts they passed last month. 
 Some Democrats, meanwhile, say Biden has not been vocal enough about 
			the downsides to Republicans' proposed spending cuts, in contrast to 
			McCarthy who has been briefing reporters multiple times per day.
 
 "I would urge the president to use the power of the bully pulpit of 
			the presidency," said Democratic Representative Steven Horsford.
 
 (Reporting by Nandita Bose, Jarrett Renshaw, David Morgan, Richard 
			Cowan, Moira Warburton, Trevor Hunnicutt, Douglas Gillison, Gram 
			Slattery, Dan Burns and Karen Brettell; writing by Andy Sullivan; 
			Editing by Scott Malone, Mary Milliken, Alistair Bell, Rosalba 
			O'Brien, Nick Zieminski, Deepa Babington and Lincoln Feast.)
 
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