Lawmakers Eye Policy Actions on Debt Limit
The New Year’s cliff deal postponed the across-the-board spending cuts mandated by last year’s debt ceiling for two months, until March 1, right around when Treasury will brush up against the debt
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The New Year’s cliff deal postponed the across-the-board spending cuts mandated by last year’s debt ceiling for two months, until March 1, right around when Treasury will brush up against the debt
“Our No. 1 concern is to get a gubernatorial candidate and lieutenant governor, to get that going,” Bergen County Democratic Chairman Lou Stellato said.
Chris Christie led the attacks on the speaker for failing to bring to the floor, and thus killing, a Senate-passed bill (HR 1) that would have provided $60.4 billion in disaster funding.
They will meet with their conference at 1 p.m., likely to discuss their options and the particulars of the Senate-passed legislation (HR 8). Speaker John A.
And in the next round, Obama’s vow not to negotiate over the debt ceiling will run headlong into Boehner’s treasured “Boehner Rule,” a demand for $1 in deficit cuts for every $1 in new debt.
The conference met for the first time at 1 p.m. and votes that were originally scheduled to be held after the meeting were postponed until later in the afternoon.
The House would take up the Senate bill (HR 1), then consider a $27 billion alternative that would address some of the most immediate needs, such as a $9.7 billion increase in borrowing authority for the
Boehner struggled to pass his “plan B” legislation last month after members balked at the prospect of allowing tax rates to rise on those making more than $1 million annually.
At 1:30 a.m., the Senate passed a deal struck with the White House on impending tax increases. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., says the chamber will likely reconvene Jan. 3.
Whether lawmakers will act to block scheduled cuts to Medicare physician payment rates before Jan. 1 remains up in the air, as discussions on a plan to avert the fiscal cliff deteriorated Sunday.
Boehner was open to a deal that raised taxes by $1 trillion and cut spending by $1 trillion.
Senators have been motivated to complete a deal by Jan. 1 so that they could say that they acted to prevent a tax increase on middle-class families.
Unrestricted super PACs and politically active advocacy groups spent more than $1 billion on campaign activities, and many found creative ways to avoid disclosing their funders.
Biden Jr. and Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, would block scheduled 27 percent payment cuts to Medicare physicians that start Jan. 1, and keep rates frozen at current levels for one
Republicans leaving a Monday evening caucus meeting said decisions about the scale of the bill (HR 1) that the Senate passed Dec. 28 remained up in the air.
All three would put on hold a return to 1949 permanent law, delaying the so-called dairy cliff that is set to occur Jan. 1.
President Barack Obama on Sunday sought to ratchet up the pressure on Congress to pass an eleventh hour legislative package to limit the effect of tax increases set to take effect Jan. 1.
agreement — exchanged terse and matter-of-fact statements with Reid, D-Nev., on the Senate floor, casting doubt on the prospects for a deal that would prevent tax increases for all Americans beginning Jan. 1.
But that offer — made before Christmas — was part of a grand bargain, one that would include a long-term debt limit hike and far more revenue, $1.3 trillion as opposed to the less than $1 trillion
It also appears more likely that House GOP leaders may prefer not to vote on any deal until Jan. 2, when any agreement would technically represent a tax cut after rates go up on Jan. 1.