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Speaker Mike Johnson says Congress will increase the debt limit in a budget reconciliation bill House Republicans hope to pass next month. The clock is ticking. If Congress does not increase the debt limit the nation will default on its bills, causing widespread economic consequences.
The debt limit is the maximum amount of money the federal government is authorized to borrow to pay its bills. The nation hit the ceiling on January 1, but the Treasury Department can avoid a loan default for a number of months by moving money around from nonessential accounts.
Budget reconciliation packages amend spending that has already been approved by Congress. Lawmakers cannot increase the baseline number, they can only adjust what it’s being used for.
Reconciliation bills require only a simple majority for approval in both chambers, so Republicans have the numbers to do it without any input from Democrats. That’s exactly what Speaker Johnson says they plan to do.
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La.: “If it runs through regular order and regular process, and as a standalone or as part of the appropriations, for example, then, then you have to have both parties negotiating, and we feel like we’re in better stead to do it ourselves.”
Johnson explained the Republican party’s philosophy regarding spending and the debt ceiling. He says raising the borrowing limit will not be an excuse to spend more than the government’s revenue, which is currently happening.
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La.: “Our intention and our mission is to reduce the size and scope of government, to reduce spending in a meaningful way so that we can restore fiscal sanity and get our country back on the right track. So raising the debt limit is a necessary step so that we don’t give the appearance that we’re going to default in some way on the nation’s debt, that that’s important to the bond markets and the stability of the dollar and all the rest.”
There are a number of measures Republicans hope to include in the reconciliation package, but everything has to be related to the budget. The Senate parliamentarian can remove items from the bill if they determine it is not budget related.
Republicans want to expand oil drilling in the arctic, repeal electric vehicle subsidies and rescind tailpipe emissions rules. In addition, some Republicans want to restore state and local tax deductions, which they repealed in the 2017 tax bill.
Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-NY: The thing that’s interesting about the whole state and local tax deduction issue is that the Republicans burn the house down and now want to pretend that they’re firefighters. Are you kidding me?
President-elect Trump is meeting with Senate Republicans Wednesday night to discuss the budget reconciliation package. It’s a top priority and House Republicans hope to pass it out of their chamber by February.