LIMITED OPTIONS The cuts McCarthy is proposing would not touch the main drivers of the debt Republicans complain about -- the Social Security and Medicare retirement and healthcare programs that are projected to nearly double in cost over the next 10 years, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Republicans have also said they don't intend to cut military spending. McCarthy said on Monday that he would not agree to raising taxes That leaves little ways to meaningfully reduce the budget deficit, the gap between the amount of money the government takes in and spends. McCarthy leads a fractious caucus that holds a narrow 222-213 House majority, including a sizeable contingent of hard line members who want sharp spending cuts and dismiss the risks of failure to act on the debt ceiling. So far House Republicans have not produced a proposed budget of their own, a move that Biden contends would be a necessary starting point for negotiations on spending. The White House last month proposed its own budget, which it said would cut the nation's deficit by nearly $3 trillion over 10 years, though it relied on increases in taxes on businesses and the wealthy, rather than spending cuts, to do so.
The White House also notes that Congress raised the budget
ceiling three times without conditions under Biden's Republican
predecessor, Donald Trump. Congress needs to raise the debt
ceiling to cover the costs of previously passed legislation,
including Trump's 2017 tax cuts and trillions in aid approved
during the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Speaker McCarthy is breaking with the bipartisan norm he
followed under Trump by engaging in dangerous economic hostage
taking that threatens hard-working Americans' jobs and
retirement savings," White House spokesperson Andrew Bates said
in a statement.
The CBO last month laid out a range of options to address
the debt, which showed that higher tax collections would have
significantly more impact than the spending cuts under
consideration.
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aid is canceled INSIGHT-Why Republican hardliners can afford to say no to U.S.
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(Reporting by Richard Cowan and Katharine Jackson, additional
reporting by Steve Holland; Editing by Scott Malone and Alistair
Bell)