: Senate to begin process that would make raising the debt limit easier

This post was originally published on this site

The Senate on Thursday will take another step in a process that is designed to allow Democrats to raise the U.S. debt limit on their own, as Washington works to avert a default.

The House of Representatives on Tuesday passed legislation that kicked off the multi-step process. In the Senate, at least 10 Republicans will need to support legislation that sets up a simple-majority vote on the debt limit. Earlier this week, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said he was confident enough GOP senators would back the process.

Read: Congressional leaders reach deal to raise debt limit, likely averting default

If Thursday’s vote clears the Senate, Congress would have to vote later on a separate bill lifting the borrowing limit, including a dollar amount. That measure would be able to pass since Democrats control the Senate with 50 members, and Vice President Kamala Harris may cast tie-breaking votes.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has urged lawmakers to act by Dec. 15. The votes come amid sparring over President Joe Biden’s massive social-spending plan, and Republicans are eager to paint Democrats as fiscally irresponsible as next year’s midterm elections loom.

Democrats “want to create even more inflation on their own. So, as Republicans have made clear for months, they will have to own a debt ceiling increase as well,” McConnell said on Wednesday.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, says his party wants to pass the debt-limit increase “to pay the debts we have already incurred, just like any household must do.” Schumer and McConnell had weeks of talks over the debt-limit deal.

Democrats plan to pay for Biden’s “Build Back Better” plan, meanwhile, through a new corporate minimum tax and raising taxes on high-income Americans.

U.S. stock indexes
SPX,
-0.34%

on Thursday traded modestly lower, despite a better-than expected report on those seeking unemployment benefits insurance, which carved out a new pandemic-era low. 

Add Comment