May 24, 2023 Latest on debt ceiling negotiations | CNN Politics

May 24, 2023 Latest on debt ceiling negotiations

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'Living standards will go back in time': Hear how US debt default could impact your household
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Prospects grim for passing debt limit hike by June 1, GOP sources say

The prospects for enacting a debt limit hike by June 1 are grim, senior Republican sources tell CNN, even as negotiators signal they’re starting to make progress on a deal. 

As of Wednesday evening, the two sides had yet to reach an agreement on key sticking points, sources said. Even if they do, they’ll still need at least a day to turn it into bill text and then another 72 hours to give members time to read the bill before a floor vote in the House. Then it still needs to go through the Senate, where any single senator can hold things up.

That timeline makes it exceedingly unlikely that they can get a bill to President Biden’s desk by June 1 — the date the Treasury Department previously has said the country could default. Still, a number of Republicans have expressed doubt that next Thursday is the hard deadline.

That reality has started to set in among lawmakers, with the House Majority Leader’s office informing members on Wednesday that they can return home for the Memorial Day weekend after votes tomorrow, although they’ll be given 24 hours’ notice if they need to return. 

GOP leaders continue to insist a short-term patch is off the table. Regardless, that option would also require some time to get through both chambers.

Top credit rating agency places US on rating watch negative as debt ceiling fight plays out

The U.S. Capitol Dome is seen at the Capitol Building on April 17, 2023 in Washington, D.C.

Fitch Ratings placed the top-ranked United States sovereign credit rating on rating watch negative Wednesday, reflecting the uncertainty surrounding the current debt ceiling debate and the possibility of a first-ever default.

The agency, one of the top three credit rating agencies along with Moody’s and S&P, placed the US “AAA” on “rating watch negative,” signaling that it could downgrade US debt if lawmakers do not agree on a bill that raises US Treasury’s debt limit.

However, Fitch added that it still believed there will be a resolution before the “X-date.”

Read more here

Some Democrats express uneasiness about direction of debt talks

House Democrats indicated that they are concerned that the White House will give up too much in their negotiations with House Republicans, and acknowledged that the House GOP is winning the messaging war.

“The Speaker has decided to make this really a public relations effort, and really turning it into a political process. And so do we sacrifice something in the short term as a result? We sure do,” Rep. Dan Kildee said.

Democrats need to “continue to just press the most reasonable approach that we can take and try to get to yes,” he said.

Rep. Dean Phillips wouldn’t say how he believes the White House has handled the talks but did say he is disappointed that it took so long for the White House to begin negotiating because they lost a chance to fight for key Democratic priorities.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said that she hopes the White House does not yield to House Republicans on spending cuts. The New York lawmaker said she thinks the “White House is doing the best they can” and criticized Republicans.

 “When you have a party that is being reckless, that is refusing actually to negotiate and engage in what they call themselves hostage taking, it’s really about how we figure out how to break through that block of irrationality,” she said.

Billions of dollars of social security payments could be delayed if the US defaults on its debt

If the US is not able to pay all its bills for the first time ever, senior citizens could be impacted quickly.

Unless President Joe Biden and House Republicans hammer out a deal to address the debt ceiling soon, the Treasury Department may not have enough funds to fully satisfy all of the nation’s obligations as soon as June 1.

The first batch of Social Security payments – roughly $25 billion’s worth – are scheduled to be sent out on June 2. They mainly go to many of the oldest and most vulnerable of the roughly 66 million retirees, disabled workers and others in the entitlement program, those who started receiving their checks before May 1997.

Payments to more recent enrollees are set to go out on June 14, June 21 and June 28, depending on the day of the month one was born. The amounts are also about $25 billion each week.

But if the debt ceiling impasse is not resolved, those benefits could be delayed, along with paychecks to federal workers and the military, payments to Medicare providers, and federal grants to states and municipalities for Medicaid, highways, education and more.

Many senior citizens are already growing worried, especially in the past week or so as the deadline grows closer, advocates say.

Almost two-thirds of beneficiaries rely on Social Security for half of their income, and for 40% of recipients, the payments constitute at least 90% of their income, according to the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare. The average benefit for retired workers is $1,827 a month in 2023.

Read more here

McCarthy unsure whether there will be more negotiations with White House tonight

Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) speaks to members of the media at the U.S. Capitol on May 24, 2023 in Washington, D.C.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy returned to the Capitol after meetings on the debt ceiling Wednesday.

He got back shortly after 6 p.m. ET, telling reporters he’s “not sure” if there will be another meeting with White House negotiators on the debt ceiling tonight. 

“We’re gonna have a discussion here in a moment and I’ll find out,” he said as he entered his office.

House will recess Thursday after votes but will be called back for debt ceiling vote when needed

The House will recess following votes on Thursday as negotiators continue to work on a debt ceiling deal, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise said.

Scalise faced jeers and boos when he began his remarks by saying “As we all know, the House has already voted to address the debt ceiling” and castigating the Senate for not taking up their bill or being in session this week.

The House currently has a scheduled recess next week.

Progress made in meeting with negotiators at White House — but still no debt limit deal, McCarthy says

Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy stops to speak to members of the media gathered in National Statuary Hall at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, May 24, in Washington, DC.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said that the meeting between top GOP and senior White House negotiators on Wednesday moved in a positive direction — but indicated that there are still substantial issues to resolve.

Asked if the White House moved closer to GOP demands on spending cuts, McCarthy told CNN: “There was a number of issues that are out there that we’ve been working on, I think being able to find some ways that we can probably get to fruition on a couple of these, there’s still a number of these out there.”

McCarthy would not provide specific details on sticking points – but said that he is not budging from his demand to cut spending and that work requirements for social safety net programs are on the table.

He reiterated that the only concession he is willing to give is to raise the national debt ceiling.

McCarthy’s comments suggest that the White House may be willing to give in on GOP demands.

“What the White House has asked us for is to raise the debt ceiling,” McCarthy said.

He still believes that there is still enough time to reach an agreement before the default deadline.

“I still believe we have time to make an agreement and get it done,” McCarthy said when asked about his comments earlier this week that they need an agreement this week to avoid default.

One of McCarthy’s negotiators, GOP Rep. Patrick McHenry remained longer at the White House.

The speaker said he does not have another meeting scheduled with President Joe Biden at this time.

Asked about comments made by Progressive Rep. Pramila Jayapal, that Republicans rejected $3 trillion in cuts offered by the White House, McCarthy accused Biden of wanting to tax people more.

“I know the president wants to tax people more … so it really goes to the fundamental problem that we have Democrats want to spend more and tax more,” McCarthy said.

All 213 House Democrats have signed discharge petition, leaders say, but there's no GOP support

All 213 House Democrats have signed onto a discharge petition Wednesday that can be used as a vehicle to bypass House GOP leadership and force a vote to raise the debt ceiling, leaders announced.

The party took a key procedural step earlier this month to begin setting up the process that would enable House Democrats to bring up a discharge petition. 

However, a majority of House members, 218, need to sign onto the bill in order for it to pass, meaning Democrats would need at least five Republican representatives to support it. As of now, no House Republicans have indicated they plan to sign on, and it remains extremely unlikely the petition could get the votes to pass on the House floor.

Some Americans say they are worried about a potential debt default

Americans who are already trying to navigate persistently high inflation, soaring interest rates, banking turmoil and recession fears are now faced with trying to prepare for the “unthinkable:” a potential US debt default.

Earlier this month, Kimberly Dickerson called up her creditors, asking about contingency plans in the event that her Social Security Disability check doesn’t land in June.

“The only way I can say it is, it’s going to be catastrophic,” said Dickerson, 52, of Richmond, Virginia.

Debt ceiling negotiations are continuing on Capitol Hill as a deadline of default looms larger by the day. Average Americans are taking notice and trying their best to protect themselves and their livelihoods.

A cross-section of Americans told CNN they’re becoming increasingly worried not only about the threat of the US defaulting on some or all of its financial responsibilities but also the effects of any spending cuts made in negotiations.

Teri House of Kansas met with a financial adviser about whether she could bear the cost if her elderly mother’s federal assistance is interrupted, putting the Navy veteran’s established memory care services at risk.

Meanwhile, just outside Detroit, veteran Christopher Land is nervous too. He said his family would immediately feel the impacts of a failed debt ceiling negotiation, and he’s concerned about what it would mean for his fellow residents in need.

“Our retirement savings were wiped out by medical debts years ago,” said Land, 41, whose wife is disabled. “A default could be really bad for us. I’m employed by a city government. We are on public assistance. We have loans. We’re living on the right side of the paycheck-to-paycheck line, but not by a lot.”

In Tucson, Arizona, Alejandro Terrazas fears he may lose a chunk of his retirement savings and rainy day funds if the impasse continues.

“I’m getting up there in years, but I’m not ready to retire probably for 10 more years, and if it’s some temporary thing, I won’t make any moves,” said Terrazas, 60. “But most of my money in retirement is in the stock market, except for the house I own.”

Read what other Americans are saying.

McCarthy: House members should stay close to DC over holiday weekend in case of vote on a debt ceiling deal

 House Speaker Kevin McCarthy speaks with reporters moments after returning from a meeting with President Joe Biden and other congressional leaders at the White House to discuss the debt ceiling, on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, May 16, in Washington, DC.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said that members should plan to be close to Washington, DC, over Memorial Day weekend so they can return to vote on a debt-ceiling deal if necessary. 

McCarthy reiterated that the only “stumbling block” in the negotiations with the Democrats is spending.

Republican negotiators spent about four hours with their White House counterparts today at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.

McCarthy said he spoke to his team half an hour before the interview.

“I just talked to them 30 minutes ago, I think today they would say they’re making progress,” McCarthy said. 

At the outset of the interview, McCarthy said “things are going a little better.”

Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal lays out 4 White House proposals Republicans have rejected

Representative Pramila Jayapal, a Democrat from Washington, during a news conference at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on Wednesday, May 24, 2023. 

House Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal said Wednesday that the White House told her that House Republicans have rejected $3 trillion worth of policies that would have gone toward deficit reduction throughout the debt ceiling negotiations process.

The policies proposed by the White House that House GOP has rejected:

  • Ending tax subsidies for big oil that would have brought in $31 billion
  • Closing the carried interest and other tax loopholes that would have raised more than $60 billion
  • Increasing the number of drugs that Medicare can negotiate prices for that would have saved $200 billion
  • A billionaire minimum tax and a corporate global minimum tax would bring in almost $1 trillion

Progressives called on their Republican colleagues to join them in signing a discharge petition to raise a clean debt ceiling. Asked by CNN if any Republicans seem willing to cross party lines and buck House GOP leadership, Jayapal said, “There is going to be a moment here, and it’s coming very, very soon” where Republicans are going to have to make a choice. 

Jayapal also called on President Biden to use the 14th amendment if House GOP continues to refuse to sign onto any revenue-raising policies or onto a discharge petition. 

Debt limit negotiators leave meeting at Eisenhower building

Negotiators were spotted leaving the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on Wednesday afternoon as House Republicans and the White House work to come to an agreement on the debt ceiling.

White House negotiators Steve Ricchetti and Louisia Terrell and House GOP negotiator Rep. Patrick McHenry were in the group.

They assembled at noon Wednesday to continue discussions on the debt limit, CNN’s Arlette Saenz reported earlier today.

Dow closes around 250 points lower

US stocks fell on Wednesday, with the Dow ending the day down by around 250 points as Wall Street appeared to be waking up to the growing possibility of a default.

There are just four trading days left until Janet Yellen’s June 1 “hard deadline” for the United States to raise the debt ceiling or risk defaulting on its obligations.

Treasury yields, meanwhile, moved higher across the curve Wednesday as worries of a default grew.

Minutes from the Federal Reserve’s May policymaking meeting, released Wednesday afternoon, did little to buoy investors’ outlooks.

The meeting notes showed that central bank policymakers were divided at their last meeting as to whether or not another rate hike was needed to slow the economy and cool inflation. Officials also expressed worries about the United States defaulting on its debt, and Fed economists also reaffirmed their forecast of a mild recession later in the year.

Yellen says she will try to narrow forecast for debt default "X-date"

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen appears before the Senate Appropriations Committee during a hearing to review the fiscal year 2024 budget for the Department of the Treasury, on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday, March 22.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Wednesday that she will try to be more precise about when the nation could start missing payments in her next advisory to Congress.

But she repeated that it’s tough to pinpoint the X-date, when the nation may not be able to satisfy all its bills, even a few weeks in advance because of the inherent uncertainty of incoming revenue and outgoing obligations.

In her letter to Congress on Monday, she said it is “highly likely that Treasury will no longer be able to satisfy all of the government’s obligations if Congress has not acted to raise or suspend the debt limit by early June, and potentially as early as June 1.”

She stressed on Wednesday that if negotiations between the White House and House Republicans fail to produce a deal in time, “there will be some difficult choices to make.”

“Treasury and President Biden will face very tough choices if Congress doesn’t act to raise the debt ceiling,” Yellen said. “And if we hit the so-called X-date without that occurring, there will be some obligations that we will be unable to pay.” 

The secretary declined to detail exactly what Treasury can do in terms of payments, but said that “as a general matter, prioritization is not really something that’s operationally feasible.”

“Our payment systems have been constructed in order to pay our bills, not to decide which bills to pay and which bills not to pay,” she said.

Treasury has sent a memo to federal agencies asking if they can delay making certain payments to conserve cash, a source familiar with the matter told CNN. The Washington Post first reported on the memo.

Some House Republicans, however, don’t think that the true deadline is on June 1. They argue that Yellen should be more “transparent” about her forecasts.

“It looks like they’re hedging now and opening up the door to move that date back,” House Majority Leader Steve Scalise said Tuesday.

Multiple analyses have estimated that the X-date will probably occur in early June, but not necessarily June 1. The Bipartisan Policy Center on Tuesday projected that Treasury will most likely lack the cash to meet all of its obligations sometime between early June and early August, with an “elevated risk” between June 2 and June 13.

If Treasury can continue paying the bills into the middle of next month, then it’s likely the government won’t default until later in the summer. The agency will get another injection of funds from second quarter estimated tax payments, which are due June 15, and from $145 billion in an “extraordinary measure” that becomes available at the end of that month.

CNN’s Alayna Treene and Kristin Wilson contributed to this report.

White House says negotiators are "absolutely empowered" to negotiate on behalf of Biden in debt limit talks

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during a press briefing at the White House, Wednesday, May 24.

White House negotiators are “absolutely empowered” to negotiate on behalf of President Joe Biden in the debt limit discussions, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Wednesday, pushing back against reports that the negotiators have been hamstrung by the White House.

“They’re absolutely empowered – this is a team that the president selected himself, these are long-term advisers, long-time advisers, I should say, to the president,” Jean-Pierre said.

Pressed in a follow-up question by CNN’s Phil Mattingly, Jean-Pierre declined to weigh in on what the White House thinks of lead House GOP negotiators Patrick McHenry and Garret Graves.

Discussions between lead negotiators are still underway at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, Jean-Pierre added.

Why a key credit rating provider is confident America won't suffer its first-ever default

Even though time is running out to get a debt ceiling deal through Congress, one of the key players that will decide the fate of America’s credit rating is convinced disaster will be averted.

Even though there are just eight days to go before the government could run out of cash, Foster said Moody’s is confident the federal government will not suffer a first-ever default.

“If we were less confident, we would change our outlook to negative,” Foster said.

The coming days and weeks could test that confidence.

House Republicans and the White House are, so far, struggling to find a compromise on how to raise the debt ceiling. Cash levels at the US Treasury are dwindling and the accounting gimmicks officials are using to avoid default won’t last much longer.

Wall Street is even starting to wake up to the debt ceiling dangers ahead, with the stock market finally buckling a bit following days of calm.

Asked why he is confident the United States won’t default, Foster pointed to historical precedent, adding, “There has never been a default.”

The Moody’s executive also referenced comments from Republican and Democrat leaders alike about the importance of America paying its bills.

However, given the tight timetable between now and the June 1 deadline set by the Treasury Department, Moody’s isn’t ruling out the idea that the federal government could be forced to delay payments on other items beyond payments to bondholders.

Fed officials were worried about a US default when they hiked rates earlier this month

A potential US default was a big concern for Federal Reserve officials when they voted to raise interest rates earlier this month, according to minutes from that meeting released on Wednesday.

Officials raised the central bank’s benchmark lending rate by a quarter point to 5-5.25% in the first week of May. Among the many developments officials discussed, the economic fallout of a US default was one of them, including how the central bank would respond.

When will the US government run out of cash? It's a moving target

The clock is ticking down to a US default, but it’s not entirely clear when the US will officially run out of cash. It’s also not clear what a potential deal to avert a first-ever default will look like.

The day the US government will run out of cash is actually a moving target.

The US actually exceeded its borrowing authority back in January, but Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen authorized “extraordinary measures” – essentially moving money around – to give lawmakers time to act.

She has said those extraordinary measures will be exhausted as soon as June 1, but third-party estimates suggest it could end up taking weeks or even months longer.

The government takes in and spends money every day. It also takes cash from public debt it has sold to cover expenses.

The Treasury Department publishes a daily balance sheet. Last Thursday it showed an operating cash balance of $57 billion, including billions in deposits – everything from income taxes and Medicare premiums to the foreign military sales program – and $205 billion in cash from debt.

CNN’s Tami Luhby writes that if the US can limp to the middle of June, an expected infusion of estimated tax payments could forestall the so-called X date until later in the summer. Treasury officials might not even know until a day or two before the X date occurs.

You can read more about the US debt drama here.

The default date for the nation's debt is fast approaching. Here's how it could affect you

A poster at a bus shelter shows the national debt in Washington, DC, on May 21.

President Joe Biden and House Republicans have a short amount of time to prevent the US from defaulting on its debt, which would impact millions of Americans and unleash economic and fiscal chaos here and around the world.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has warned the government may not be able to pay all of its bills in full and on time as soon as June 1.

Here are just three ways that Americans could be affected by debt default:

Social Security payments: Payments to about 66 million retirees, disabled workers and others receive monthly Social Security benefits could be delayed in a debt default scenario, though it’s possible Treasury could continue making on-time payments because of the entitlement program’s trust fund, said Shai Akabas, director of economic policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center.

Almost two-thirds of beneficiaries rely on Social Security for half of their income, and for 40% of recipients, the payments constitute at least 90% of their income, according to the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare.

Other government payments could also be affected, including funding for food stamps; federal grants to states and municipalities for Medicaid, highways, education and other programs.

Federal employees and veterans benefits: More than 2 million federal civilian workers and around 1.4 million active-duty military members could see their paychecks delayed. Federal government contractors could also see a lag in payments, which could affect their ability to compensate their workers.

Also, certain veterans benefits, including disability payments and pensions for some low-income veterans and their surviving families, could be affected.

The economy: A debt default could trigger an economic downturn, which would prompt a spike in unemployment. It would come at a particularly fragile time — when the nation is already dealing with rising interest rates and stubbornly high inflation.

How much damage would be done would depend on how long the crisis continues. If the default lasts for about a week, then close to 1 million jobs would be lost, including in the financial sector, which would be hard hit by the stock market declines. Also, the unemployment rate would jump to about 5% and the economy would contract by nearly half a percent, according to Moody’s.

“It would be a body blow to the economy, and it would be a manufactured crisis,” said Bernard Yaros, an economist at Moody’s.

Dow drops nearly 300 as Wall Street worries over debt ceiling negotiations

US stocks were lower in midday trading on Wednesday as concerns mounted on Wall Street over the stalled debt ceiling negotiations.

Until today, investors had remained largely optimistic that the debt ceiling would be lifted before the so-called X-date, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s June 1 deadline for the United States to raise the debt ceiling or risk defaulting on its obligations.

But with just over a week left until that deadline, investors appear to be waking up to the reality that a deal may not be made.

Defaulting on the US debt would be “potentially catastrophic,” JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said earlier this month. “The closer you get to it, you will have panic. Markets will get volatile, maybe the stock market will go down, the Treasury markets will have their own problems,” he said. “This is not good.”

Wall Street’s key measure of volatility, the VIX, spiked by more than 10% on Wednesday.

US Treasury yields also rose Wednesday across the curve as investors weighed the risk of a default.

The Dow was down 283 points, or 0.9%, on Wednesday afternoon.

The S&P 500 also fell by 0.9%.

The Nasdaq Composite was 1% lower.

READ MORE

America’s borrowing is its superpower. A default would tarnish that
Here’s what happened to the federal debt under past presidents – and why it’s hard to assign blame
McCarthy tells Republicans he’s ‘nowhere near’ a debt limit deal with Biden as deadline nears
How you can prepare for a debt default
Yellen warns Congress again that default could be just days away, but others forecast a little more time

READ MORE

America’s borrowing is its superpower. A default would tarnish that
Here’s what happened to the federal debt under past presidents – and why it’s hard to assign blame
McCarthy tells Republicans he’s ‘nowhere near’ a debt limit deal with Biden as deadline nears
How you can prepare for a debt default
Yellen warns Congress again that default could be just days away, but others forecast a little more time