President Biden has said he would not compromise on raising the debt ceiling but lately he has sent mixed signals. If the debt ceiling is not raised, the United States would be forced to default on its bonds for the first time in history. Congress raised the debt ceiling three times during Trump’s term in office. Congressional Republicans passed a budget that allows increases for defense and border security but requires steep cuts in everything else. Trump, the titular leader of the Republican Party, said at his New Hampshire town hall, that the U.S. should default on its debt, even though most economists predict that a default would likely precipitate a deep recession, with global consequences. Trump once called himself “the king of debt,” so he has no fear of the consequences, which would hurt Biden in 2024.
Ryan Cooper of The American Prospect explains why the President should not compromise and what those cuts would mean:
For months, President Biden had a consistent line on the debt ceiling: He would accept only a clean increase, without conditions. This was the lesson from the Obama administration, it was thought, learned at great expense when President Obama tried to negotiate with Tea Party Republicans in 2011 to get a grand bargain to cut the deficit. The result was the budget “sequester,” which badly eroded the federal government and elongated the agonizingly slow economic recovery. That’s why Obama stood his ground in 2013, and Republicans—eventually—backed down, getting essentially nothing out of the eventual debt ceiling increase.
But now all that is out the window. With the June 1 X-date approaching, the Washington media clamoring for Biden to cave, and administration officials working themselves into an anxious fit over potential executive actions to nullify the ceiling, it seems President Dark Brandon is returning to be old Conciliatory Joe. The man himself telegraphed this in a speech in New York last week that was designed to hammer Republicans over the debt ceiling, saying “we should be cutting spending and lowering the deficit without a needless crisis, in a responsible way.”
Reuters and Politico report that the White House is preparing to offer concessions in the form of cutting discretionary spending to the level of fiscal year 2022, and then capping the rate of increase at 1 percent per year for an indeterminate period, maybe two years. There would be other parts to the compromise, including rescinding some COVID aid and some bargain on permitting reform, but as far as spending, the discretionary caps would be the major piece.
This is a disastrous move. Politically, it reinforces the precedent that Republicans can extract concessions through legislative terrorism, and by signaling weakness and timidity in the Democratic leadership, it will further enable GOP extremism. If Republicans control either chamber of Congress next time the ceiling is hit—a high likelihood given how bad the Senate map is in 2024—then they’re virtually certain to take the debt ceiling hostage again.
But the practical consequences will also be terrible. We don’t know the details yet, but returning to fiscal year 2022 budget levels would mean an immediate cut of about 13 percent to every government agency and program (thanks to an unusually large spending increase in 2023 to account for economic growth, high inflation, and a few additional programs). If defense and border cops are exempted, then the cut will be perhaps 22 percent.
Read all of our debt ceiling coverage here
Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT), the ranking member on the House Appropriations Committee, solicited estimates from various government departments on what that 22 percent cut would mean. They told her that just for starters, 60,000 people would not be able to attend college; 200,000 children would get kicked off Head Start; 100,000 families would lose child care; and 1.2 million people would be removed from WIC nutrition assistance.
One hundred twenty-five air traffic control towers would be shut down, affecting one-third of airports, and no doubt worsening the chronic snarls in American air travel. Rail safety inspections would be cut back by 11,000 work days, meaning 30,000 miles of track going uninspected. (More dangerous chemical spills, here we come!) Some 640,000 families would lose rental assistance, and 430,000 more would be evicted from Section 8 housing. And even all that isn’t the whole list of carnage.
Now, Republicans have not suggested an across-the-board cut, and it’s certainly possible that some of the above priorities would be spared. But that would only make the cuts to the programs that don’t get such treatment worse, because appropriators would need to hit that overall cap number.
Incidentally, this illustrates well the utter stupidity of Republican budget politics. Instead of drawing up a list of priorities, calculating how to fund them, and then writing a budget plan to fit—they neither know nor care about any of that stuff—they just demand arbitrary and escalating cuts to everything that isn’t the troops or border police, because that’s what right-wing media says is the most conservative thing to do.
Needless to say, there’s no indication of any revenue increases being discussed to offset this pain. Anti-tax Republicans wouldn’t like that, and in this hostage situation, you mustn’t anger the guys (and it’s mostly guys) with the guns.
There may well be macroeconomic effects from this deal as well. These cuts would suck hundreds of billions of dollars out of an economy that is already plainly softening, thanks to high interest rates and instability in the banking system. A ton of austerity might just be the thing that tips America into a recession during an election year, with Biden, a willing negotiator in this process, on the ballot.
Finally, it’s not at all clear that House Republicans will actually accept this partial ransom. Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy just barely managed to pass his current debt ceiling hostage note by giving the far right everything it asked for (and then only because two Democrats were absent from the chamber). Sure enough, several members told PoliticoFriday that they want the spending cap to last ten years instead of two, at a minimum. As I was writing this, others also told Politico they want harsh border controls as well.
From their perspective, this makes perfect sense. If Biden is too weak-willed to stare down Republicans like Obama did in 2013, and too chicken to mint the coin or invoke the 14th Amendment, why not demand more concessions while he’s on the ropes? Heck, why not demand the entire ransom, including work requirements for Medicaid and gutting the Inflation Reduction Act?
Two years of capped spending is bad enough. But it might end up being even worse.
I have found this podcast by Robert Reich where at 11 min he starts talking about the debt ceiling. Besides explaining why ignoring the debt ceiling is much better than the alternative, he says that according to the 14th amendment, Biden has a constitutional obligation to ignore the debt ceiling.
https://robertreich.substack.com/p/trump-santos-kevin-mccarthy-and-other?publication_id=365422&post_id=121006256#details
The GOP could care less that numerous would happen to social and economic programs that serve the most vulnerable, those that have the least and are living on the edge of being unhoused. These people are not their base.
We are already living with Trump’s deregulation in railroad safety standards, and we can readily see the impact of loosening safety standards. A reduction in air traffic controllers potentially could be equally as devastating.https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/mar/17/donald-trump-railways-banks-deregulation-blames-biden
The investment portfolios of GOP members would be affected—they really can’t let US default.
They don’t care about US standing in the world or 70 million wouldn’t have voted for DJT in ‘20.
Keven McCarthy needs the votes of the 45 members of the so-called Freedom Caucus that Marjorie Tayler Greene and the other extremist, fascist loving, dumb-or-dumber, foaming at the mouth elected MAGA RINOs belong to. If McCarthy wants to stay Speaker of the House, next in line behind the VP for the presidency, he has to do what Fascist Caucus tell him. They are the tail that is wagging the GOP elephant.
Why doesn’t Biden make a deal (if he hasn’t already tried and failed) with McCarthy to cut off that tail and get him the votes he needs from Democrats in the House to keep him Speaker so McCarthy doesn’t need the MAGA Fascist votes to keep that position?
A correction for the question posed “What happens WHEN Biden folds on the debt ceiling?”
Perhaps if the border was closed and Europe spent more money defending Ukraine than the US, the debt ceiling would not be such an issue. Eliminate spending in places like the IRS and foreign wars and on various government agencies–then discuss the debt limit. There can be no negotiating without spending concessions. Trust works both ways.
Yeah, let’s negotiate goverment spending on the 1%. Let’s also negotiate how the 1% can contribute more to taxes. Since trust works both ways.
How much ability does Biden have to not cave on the debt ceiling. Are the votes there for him?
Some people think he can invoke the 14th Amendment to raise the debt ceiling. It would get expedited review by the courts.
Does not sound like a great option. Pretty “experimental,” and given litigation, even expedited, we would default before the issue was decided. Not to mention what’s surely a skeptical SCOTUS.
What is this experimental? Not to compromise on issues that support the public instead of special interests?
The use of the 14th amendment for this purpose is experimental. As in it’s never been done and we don’t have high confidence courts will accept it.
The important thing is not the amount of national debt, but the national deficit, that is, debt minus income (like tax). We can increase the income by paying more taxes, and we can curb spending by not spending on stuff that are not good investments for the 99%. Interestingly, conservatives always want to curb spending on the 99%, and want to decrease the 1%’s contribution to income.
Conservatives are very good with language: when they spend on the interest of the 1% (like military), they call it “a good business investment” but when it’s about the interest of the 99% (like public schools or healthcare) then it’s plain old spending poor US cannot afford.
Not all debt ceiling concept may be misleading or irrelevant. For example, the debt ceiling for the 1% appears useful, since it would explicitly tell the public the limit on how much the US is willing to spend on the 1%.