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Elroy Jetson

05/26/23 3:26 PM

#106210 RE: dexprs #106208

The debt will be paid on time, as always.

Once the Treasury runs short of money the White House has full discretion to keep paying the debt but not pay other obligations like Medicare providers, Social Security, or military pensions or pay, which is the real goal of extremist Republicans - a shrunken all-volunteer Army with no entitlements for retired Americans.

June 15 estimated tax payments are due which will provide some more time to see if any members of the Freedom Caucus get into any fatal accidents.

The real problem is while there are enough bipartisan votes to pass the McCarthy-Biden Compromise, the Freedom Caucus with one vote will vacate Kevin McCarthy from his position as Speaker of the House, maybe even before they allow a vote on the silly debt ceiling.

It's again going to a Freedom Caucus pandemonium and like Matt Gates said, "We don't see a need to negotiate with the hostage." They're dead-enders.
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Elroy Jetson

05/27/23 9:14 PM

#106216 RE: dexprs #106208

President Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) have reached an “agreement in principle” to raise the debt ceiling and reduce federal spending.

Now Kevin merely has to find the magical powers needed to obtain a majority of Congressional House members to vote for the agreement he has negotiated.

Conservatives on Saturday appeared on the verge of revolt as McCarthy failed to meet all of their many demands.

During the previous House-led hostage crisis in 2011 the US Treasury did not default, but the debate alone still sank the stock market and brought about a rare downgrade in U.S. credit, raising the risk that hard-fringe Republicans’ renewed sense of brinkmanship will still carry its own economic consequences.


The agreement will reportedly keep spending “roughly flat” at federal health, education, science, labor and other domestic agencies, which would see a 1 percent increase in 2025.

McCarthy rejected any repeal of Trump's signature tax cuts which created much of the new debt but instead agreed to offset Republican demands for 50% budget cuts by redirecting money set aside to help the IRS pursue unpaid taxes, which Republicans long have opposed as an infringement of their personal financial freedom.