Yellen wants debt limit hike via regular order; Dems leave it out of reconciliation, setting up fall showdown
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Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Monday urged Congress to pass a debt ceiling increase through regular order with bipartisan votes, as Senate Democrats left any such language out of their Senate budget resolution released just a few minutes later.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., meanwhile is swearing that Republicans will under no circumstances provide the votes to raise the debt ceiling, setting up a potential high-stakes showdown this fall.
"In recent years Congress has addressed the debt limit through regular order, with broad bipartisan support. In fact, during the last administration, Democrats and Republicans came together to do their duty three times," Yellen wrote Monday. "Congress should do so again now by increasing or suspending the debt limit on a bipartisan basis."
McConnell has been urging his fellow Republicans to say no to any debt ceiling legislation. Instead, he says Democrats should use the budget reconciliation process to bypass the filibuster and pass a debt limit increase with just their 50 Senate votes.
WHAT IS THE DEBT CEILING?
Democrats are the ones currently driving trillions and trillions of dollars in federal spending, McConnell said, so Republicans should not "give them political cover for the partisan debt bomb they'll go right on to detonate with zero input from us."
But Yellen said in her Monday statement that McConnell's characterization is inaccurate.
"[I]ncreasing or suspending the debt limit does not increase government spending, nor does it authorize spending for future budget proposals," she said. "[I]t simply allows Treasury to pay for previously enacted expenditures. Failure to meet those obligations would cause irreparable harm to the U.S. economy and the livelihoods of all Americans."
Yellen's statement was the first time the Biden administration weighed in on how Congress should increase the debt ceiling. White House press secretary Jen Psaki recently declined to give the president's opinion on what the legislature should do. She emphasized that Congress must increase the debt limit somehow to avoid a default that would be catastrophic for the economy but left the details up to congressional leaders.