US Senate Democrats, Republicans reach deal on $480bn debt limit increase

US Senate leaders have agreed to raise the Treasury Department's borrowing authority until early December, averting a potential debt default later this month, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced on Thursday.

>>Reuters
Published : 7 Oct 2021, 03:44 PM
Updated : 7 Oct 2021, 03:44 PM

"We have reached agreement to extend the debt ceiling through early December and it's our hope we can get this done as soon as today," Schumer said referring to a vote on passage of the legislation.

A Senate aide, who asked not to be identified, said the deal calls for a debt limit increase of $480 billion from the current $28.4 trillion. If approved by the Senate and House of Representatives, the US debt limit would then be set at $28.9 trillion.

Democrats had been trying to pass legislation that would have raised the debt limit through the end of 2022 but Republicans blocked that effort.

If the new deal passes, Congress would have several weeks to attempt to agree on either a longer-term debt limit increase or another stop-gap measure.

Congress also faces a deadline for funding the government in December. Democrats also want to pass two massive spending bills that make up much of President Joe Biden's domestic agenda in the coming weeks, including a multitrillion-dollar social policy package and a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill.

Without congressional action to raise the debt limit, the Treasury Department has forecast that it will run out of ways to pay all of its bills by Oct. 18.

On Wednesday, a breakthrough came when Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell proposed a temporary increase that would not be blocked by members of his party.

That offer triggered hours of behind-the-scenes negotiations between the two sides than ran late into Wednesday night.

While Democrats were going along with a two-month extension of the higher borrowing cap, they showed little interest in another demand from McConnell: that they use the intervening weeks to pass a longer-debt ceiling extension through a complex process called reconciliation.

Several Democrats said this would be too complicated and risky.

"We're not going to do debt limit through reconciliation," said Democratic Senator Debbie Stabenow. "At this point, if we can move it (the debt ceiling) till December, that just gives us more time to ... get the President's agenda done."

Republicans said they had been worried that Democrats might change a rule known as the filibuster that requires a supermajority of 60 votes for most legislation to advance if the debt issue were not resolved.

The Senate is split 50-50 between the parties, which has allowed Republicans to use the filibuster to block Democratic efforts to suspend the debt limit as well as other Democratic initiatives. But Biden said late on Tuesday that Democrats would consider making an exception to the filibuster to hike the debt ceiling and defend the economy.

Asked if his fellow Republicans were getting concerned about getting close to a default, Senator Kevin Cramer said: "Republicans are more concerned about the prospect of blowing up the filibuster."