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John Boehner To Ask House GOP For Short-Term Debt Ceiling Increase
Posted: 10/10/2013 10:08 am EDT | Updated: 10/10/2013 1:01 pm EDT
WASHINGTON
(AP) — GOP aides say House Speaker John Boehner will ask House
Republicans to approve a short-term extension of the government's
ability to borrow to meet its bills.The Ohio Republican is slated to urge his staunchly conservative GOP colleagues to act before the government runs out of borrowing authority next week.
Republicans have been insistent that budget cuts and other measures be added to the so-called debt ceiling legislation but the aides wouldn't say whether he'll seek to add other material to the measure.
The aides required anonymity to reveal the information before Boehner makes an announcement after a closed-door meeting with his GOP colleagues.
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NBC News
House GOP, White House to keep up fiscal talks after 'useful' meeting
House Republicans are continuing closed-door talks after meeting with President Barack Obama for almost 90 minutes Thursday to discuss a possible short-term extension of the nation's debt limit. Those negotiations - the most serious talks to date on the fiscal impasse - were expected to continue into Thursday evening.“We had a very useful meeting, it was clarifying for both sides as to where we are,” House Majority Leader Eric Cantor told reporters after the White House meeting. “Our teams are going to be talking further tonight. We'll have more discussion. We will come back to have more discussion. The President said that he would go and consult with the administration folks and hopefully we can see a way forward after that.”
In a statement, the White House called it a "good meeting," although "no specific determination was made" about how to fix the fiscal impasse.
"The President looks forward to making continued progress with members on both sides of the aisle. The President’s goal remains to ensure we pay the bills we’ve incurred, reopen the government and get back to the business of growing the economy, creating jobs and strengthening the middle class."
"The president didn't say yes, he didn't say no," Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisc., told NBC News. "It was a useful conversations. We're now going to negotiate."
GOP leaders are proposing extending the nation’s debt limit for six weeks to allow for budget negotiations, but the plan would do nothing to end the ongoing federal shutdown.
Obama met with 20 top House Republicans for over an hour at the White House Thursday to address the GOP proposal. The government is slated to run out of borrowing power on October 17, the Treasury Department says.
Republicans were tight-lipped about the meeting, avoiding a gaggle of press after the leaving the White House.
Earlier Thursday, the prospects for compromise looked somewhat bright.
White House press secretary Jay Carney called the GOP proposal "encouraging" and told reporters Obama would likely sign such legislation.
"The president is happy that cooler heads at least seem to be prevailing in the House," Carney said at the daily press briefing. He added: "I think the president said the other day, if they were to send him a clean debt ceiling extension, no partisan strings attached he would sign it. But we don't know that's what we're going to get here."
Stocks were up sharply Thursday morning amid the signs of potential progress on the debt ceiling extension, something Wall Street has been paying close attention to as next week’s expected October 17 debt ceiling deadline looms.
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House GOP unveils six-week debt hike that continues shutdown
10/10/13 12:14 PM ET
- In exchange, Republicans want a commitment from the White House to negotiate a longer-term budget plan that would reopen the government.
Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) presented the proposal to rank-and-file Republicans in a closed-door meeting Thursday, hours before more than a dozen GOP lawmakers head to the White House to meet with Obama.“It is our hope that the president will look at this as an opportunity and a good-faith effort on our part to move halfway, halfway to what he’s demanded in order to have these conversations begin,” Boehner told reporters after the meeting.
Boehner said the ending of the shutdown would depend on how the president responded.
“That’s the conversation we’re going to have with the president today,” he said.
The Speaker acknowledged that the fiscal crisis that has gripped the capital could come back if no agreement is reached by Nov. 22, the date that Republicans would set as the new debt-limit deadline.
“Clearly, you could end up back in the same place, and we don’t want to be here,” Boehner said.
The House hopes to move quickly on the plan, but a vote would not occur before the White House meeting, scheduled for 4:30 p.m., aides said.
The debt limit bill would also restrict the Treasury Department from using "extraordinary measures" to increase borrowing after Nov. 22, aides said.
"The date in the bill is the real date — no more monkeying around," a leadership aide said.
A separate resolution would appoint Republican negotiators for a House-Senate budget conference committee, which Democrats have demanded for months.
It is far from clear that the Speaker’s plan would succeed, either with Democrats or with members of his own conference.
The White House on Thursday reiterated Obama’s demand that the GOP both lift the $16.7 trillion debt limit and reopen the government before negotiations begin.
In the Senate, Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) announced plans for a procedural vote Saturday on legislation to raise the debt ceiling by $1 trillion and through the end of 2014.
The White House backs the longer extension, but it is unclear whether Reid can muster the 60 votes necessary to pass it.
A White House official said Thursday that the administration was “willing to look at any proposal Congress puts forward,” while again insisting that Obama would “not pay a ransom" and preferred a longer debt-ceiling extension.
“It is better for economic certainty for Congress to take the threat of default off the table for as long as possible, which is why we support the Senate Democrats’ efforts to raise the debt limit for a year with no extraneous political strings attached,” the official said.
The official also said that Obama would be willing to negotiate a broader budget agreement only after Republicans pass a debt-ceiling increase and reopen the government.
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POLITICO
John Boehner's offer puts President Obama on the spot
President Barack Obama may get the clean debt limit extension he’s been demanding, but it wouldn’t be a clean victory.
By adopting the House GOP plan to raise the debt ceiling, Obama would avoid a potentially crippling blow to the economy and, in the White House’s view, finally break Republicans of their habit of seeking concessions each time the debt ceiling needs to be raised.
“If a clean debt limit bill is passed, he would likely sign it,” White House press secretary Jay Carney said Thursday. “The key is they don’t get anything in exchange.”
The big question for the White House and Republicans in Congress is the definition of the word “clean.” It may be that the White House has to look at yesterday’s shirt — presentable, if not just-starched — as clean enough.
By adopting the House GOP plan to raise the debt ceiling, Obama would avoid a potentially crippling blow to the economy and, in the White House’s view, finally break Republicans of their habit of seeking concessions each time the debt ceiling needs to be raised.
But the downsides are significant. The federal
government might not immediately reopen, there’s no guarantee
Republicans would stop using the debt limit as leverage in the future
and Obama could find himself in the same position once the temporary
extension expires.
And yet, Obama may have little choice but to accept House Speaker
John Boehner’s offer because it delivers what the president wanted: a
debt limit hike with no ideological strings attached.“If a clean debt limit bill is passed, he would likely sign it,” White House press secretary Jay Carney said Thursday. “The key is they don’t get anything in exchange.”
The big question for the White House and Republicans in Congress is the definition of the word “clean.” It may be that the White House has to look at yesterday’s shirt — presentable, if not just-starched — as clean enough.
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