‘Show me yours’: Biden to push McCarthy on Republican budget
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy faces a lack of consensus in his party over formulating a budget.
PHOTO: REUTERS
WASHINGTON - President Joe Biden will release his proposed budget on March 9, the White House said on Tuesday, setting a deadline before his meeting with the Republican House Speaker on Wednesday to discuss the nation’s spending.
Mr Biden will ask Mr Kevin McCarthy to release a budget plan in the meeting, and to pledge to meet the nation’s debt obligations, according to a White House memo seen by Reuters.
Mr McCarthy and his fellow conservatives, who narrowly won control of the House of Representatives in November, are threatening to block a regular increase of the nation’s debt limit unless Mr Biden pledges lower spending.
Mr Biden has said any negotiation on previously approved US spending, which is generally approved on a bipartisan basis, is a non-starter.
Republicans have not yet agreed
The White House has seized on the lack of consensus to highlight fringe proposals from some Republicans, including one that abolishes the Internal Revenue Service in favour of a higher sales tax, and one that trims Social Security retirement benefits.
Asked what his message will be for Mr McCarthy, Mr Biden told reporters on Monday: “Show me your budget, I’ll show you mine.”
Mr McCarthy responded with an admonition to Mr Biden to not rule out negotiations before their White House meeting.
“The first thing they should do, especially as the president of the United States: say he’s willing to sit down and find a common ground and negotiate together,” Mr McCarthy said on Tuesday.
Extraordinary measures
While the president can propose a budget plan, both houses of Congress must pass any spending legislation. Mr Biden’s fellow Democrats narrowly control the Senate, where spending Bills need 60 votes to pass. The House needs a simple majority to pass these Bills; Mr McCarthy has ruled out cuts to Social Security and Medicare, the two largest benefit programmes.
The showdown over the growing US debt
The Treasury Department has already started taking “extraordinary measures” to stave off a default until summer after hitting the US government’s US$31.4 trillion (S$41.2 trillion) borrowing limit earlier in January.
On Wednesday, Mr Biden plans to ask Mr McCarthy if he will “commit to the bedrock principle that the United States will never default on its financial obligations” and if he agrees “that it is critical to avoid debt brinksmanship.” REUTERS


