Lawmakers stand their ground on debt crisis

Congressional leaders on Sunday showed no signs of emerging from their corners to resolve the next step in the financial crisis, with Democrats still talking about higher taxes on the wealthy and the Senate’s top Republican suggesting that a crippling default on U.S. loans was possible unless there were significant cuts in government spending.

“It’s a shame we have to use whatever leverage we have in Congress to get the president to deal with the biggest problem confronting our future, and that’s our excessive spending,” Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, said.

Last week’s deal to avert the combination of end-of-year tax increases and spending cuts known as the “fiscal cliff” held income tax rates steady for 99 percent of Americans but left some other major pieces of business unresolved.

By late February or early March, the Treasury Department will run out of options to cover the nation’s debts and could begin defaulting on government loans unless Congress raises the legal borrowing limit, or debt ceiling. Economists warn that a default could trigger a global recession.

Also looming are deep automatic spending cuts expected to take effect at the beginning of March that could further erase fragile gains in the U.S. economy. Then on March 27, the temporary measure that funds government activities expires, and congressional approval will be needed to keep the government running. It’s one more chance to fight over spending.

Lawmakers said debt talks will consume Congress in the coming weeks, likely delaying any consideration of an expected White House proposal on gun restrictions in the wake of the Connecticut school shooting.

Republicans say they are willing to raise the debt ceiling but insist any increase must be paired with significant savings from Medicare, Medicaid and other government benefit programs. President Barack Obama has said he’s willing to consider spending cuts separately but won’t bargain over the government’s borrowing authority.

“One thing I will not compromise over is whether or not Congress should pay the tab for a bill they’ve already racked up,” Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address.

Democrats said further tax increases for the wealthiest Americans were still possible as Congress looks to close the gap between revenues and expenditures. Democrats point out that Obama has already agreed to significant spending cuts, and that the latest deal only gets the nation to about half of the revenue it needs to resolve the red ink.

“Trust me, there are plenty of things within that tax code — these loopholes where people can park their money in some island offshore and not pay taxes. These are things that need to be closed. We can do that and use the money to reduce the deficit,” said Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the second-ranking Senate Democrat.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California said she, too, wants to put “everything on the table from the standpoint of closing loopholes.”

But McConnell bluntly declared that the “tax issue is over” after last week’s agreement.

“We don’t have this problem because we tax too little; we have it because we spend too much,” McConnell said.

Making the rounds on the Sunday talk shows, McConnell was asked repeatedly whether Republicans were prepared to see the nation default on its spending obligations. McConnell said that wouldn’t be necessary, so long as Obama agrees to the spending cuts.

But at one point, when asked by NBC’s David Gregory whether the GOP strategy will be to hold the debt ceiling “ransom” in exchange for spending cuts, McConnell said it was a “shame we have to use whatever leverage we have” to get the president’s attention.

“None of us like using situations like the sequester (automatic across-the-board spending cuts) or the debt ceiling or the operation of government to try to engage the president to deal with this,” McConnell said.

Sen. Lindsay Graham, R-S.C., didn’t dismiss the idea of allowing a partial shutdown of government until an agreement can be reached.

Texas Sen. John Cornyn and other Republicans have floated the idea of a shutdown as a way of winning deeper spending cuts.

“I believe we need to raise the debt ceiling, but if we don’t raise it without a plan to get out of debt, all of us should be fired,” Graham said.

Maryland Rep. Chris Van Hollen, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, said the Republican strategy amounted to: “Give us what we want ... or we’re going to tank the United States economy.”

Pelosi said she believes the president has enough authority under the 14th Amendment to raise the debt ceiling without Congress’ blessing. But the White House has said previously that it does not believe that the amendment — which says the “validity” of public debt shouldn’t be questioned — gives the president that power.

McConnell spoke on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” ABC “This Week” and CBS “Face the Nation.” Pelosi was on CBS. Durbin and Graham appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union” and Van Hollen was interviewed on “Fox News Sunday.”


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Comments (3)


1) Comment by biglsufan - 07/01/2013

They don't want to make a stand because the lobbyist that is pressuring to keep the spending is lining the pockets their friends and family so they can benefit down the road. The scooter store is one of the biggest scams out there but they don't touch it. Wonder why? FOLLOW THE MONEY!!

2) Comment by agagent - 07/01/2013

It is not rocket science. Every year we get lists and lists of waste in the federal government. There are few incentives for anyone to be responsible with the taxpayers money and many of our elected officials do not seem to care. The outgoing director said there was $450 billion annual waste in Medicaid and Medicare. The federal government misdirects or make duplicate payments or make payment to ineligible and even non-existing individual. Sometimes they do not even know where the money went. An investment in better technology would yield huge savings. The rules for the typical government program are so vague as to invite abuse and waste. There is no budget or limit on Medicaid spending. Spending must be limited to the taxpayers' ability to pay.

3) Comment by biglsufan - 07/01/2013

Over the past three year I have taken a pay cut but have not once asked any of my employees (85) to take one. I've had to reduce expenses to keep my business afloat. It's time that our congress made millionaires congressional members make ACTUAL CUTS and not cuts in the increases of government expenses. We did not vote you in to run this country into the ground. Tough choices have to be made! If it means you don't get reelected, so be it. Take your personal interest out of it. If you are smart enough to get elected, you are probably smart enough to get rich without being in congress. So what if you don't get super rich, at least you put your country first. That would be a change, now, wouldn't it?