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Debt ceiling negotiations updates between Joe Biden, Kevin McCarthy


U.S. Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) speaks to reporters as he returns from a House Republican caucus meeting, at the U.S. Caption on May 23, 2023 in Washington, DC.

Kevin Dietsch | Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Negotiations over raising the U.S. debt limit resumed Wednesday, and the two sides were still miles apart with only eight days left to pass a bill before the earliest date the U.S. could face serious risk of default.

In the Capitol, negotiators for House Republicans and the White House were expected to resume talks in the conference room just off of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s office, where they have holed up for hours every day this week.

But outside the room, concerns grew about whether negotiators would be able to reach a deal with Republicans to cut government spending in exchange for the GOP votes needed in the House to pass a bill that raises the debt ceiling before June 1.

A Democratic official who spoke to NBC News said the talks have hit a “speed bump.” But after a week of daily sessions led by a group of veteran negotiators, people on both sides said late Tuesday and Wednesday that the gap between what House Republicans want and what the White House is willing to give seemed wider than ever.

For example, one of the lead delegates for Republicans, Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, laid bare on Tuesday night what had up to that point only been implied, when a reporter asked him what concession Democrats were getting as part of the talks, in order to win their votes in the House.

“The debt ceiling,” he said.

“That’s what they’re getting,” added Rep. Garret Graves of Louisiana, another GOP negotiator.

This view of the past week as one where Democrats are forced to accept Republican demands, while Republicans in return offer only the chance to avoid a catastrophic debt default, would doubtless anger Democrats and decrease the odds of a deal. The GOP has pushed to cut spending as part of any deal to increase the debt ceiling, which on its own does not authorize new outlays.

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A default would wreak havoc on the U.S. economy and force millions to at least temporarily lose government benefit payments.

With talks at an apparent breaking point for the second time in a week, and the likelihood of a deal in the next 24 hours — in time for the House to turn an agreement into a bill and vote for it before the weekend — looking very slim, McCarthy appeared open to letting members of the House leave D.C. for the Memorial Day weekend without a deal.

“I haven’t made that decision yet,” he told reporters Tuesday, but added, “I would have, depending on where we are in that moment, have them come home and come back.”

With Republicans appearing only to harden their position as time went on, Democrats on Wednesday accused McCarthy of caving to pressure from the far right of his caucus. They said he has yielded to members who have made a laundry list of demands, yet are unlikely to vote for a debt ceiling hike, no matter what it contains.

Biden has offered compromises, a Democratic official told NBC News, including freezing spending, rescinding unspent COVID funds and putting a two-year cap on spending.

But McCarthy dismissed these concessions.

“Let me be very clear, we are not putting anything on the floor that doesn’t spend less than we spent this year,” he said Tuesday.

This is a developing story, please check back for updates.



This story originally appeared on CNBC

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