The Obama administration is calling a Republican-sponsored bill dealing with the Puerto Rico debt crisis a fair but tough bipartisan compromise, but cautioned efforts by “financial interests” to undermine the bill.
The bill was introduced a little before midnight Thursday, replacing an earlier version introduced in March and quickly revoked because of heavy criticism from various interests and opposition from the administration.
The latest version finally was unveiled after the administration and Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan and Treasury Secretary Antonio Weiss came to an agreement on the bill, details of which they had been negotiating for months.
“We are encouraged that Democrats and Republicans did work together to produce this piece of legislation. Bipartisanship is hard to come by in the United States Congress for a few years now,” said Josh Earnest, White House press secretary.
Treasury Secretary Jack Lew said the bill’s provisions allow Puerto Rico to restructure all of its liabilities, provide no bailouts for any creditors and enable “an orderly resolution to Puerto Rico’s debt crisis.”
But he also expressed disappointment that the bill does not include administration proposals to promote economic growth and provide a long-term Medicaid solution.
“Congress must stand firm and resist calls from financial interests to undermine this effort every step of the way ….,” Lew said.
House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi joined Ryan in praising the compromise and said the restructuring process it proposes could work.
However, Puerto Rico’s Gov. Alejandro García Padilla, who last December told a congressional committee he was issuing a distress because the U.S. territory had no cash left, said he found unacceptable the “attacks on our self-government” from an oversight board the bill creates. The board has significant power over the government’s spending, budgeting, debt payment and other decisions.
“I urge Congress to approve the restructuring authorities that we desperately need, not without first modifying the provisions that attack out self-government, which I find unacceptable,” García Padilla said.
The bill was introduced by Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Wis., Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, who is the chairman of the Committee on Natural Resources and Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis.
“Years of disastrous policies have completely wrecked Puerto Rico’s economy. As a result, the island and its millions of American citizens face a humanitarian crisis,” Duffy said in a statement.
Bishop, whose committee will hold a hearing on the bill and vote on whether to advance it to the full House, said the bill makes technical refinements and incorporates negotiated changes to the earlier version that was quickly withdrawn and returned to negotiations because of heavy criticism.
“Any future changes will be done in public meetings,” said Bishop, in whose committee the bill will be discussed publicly, amended if there is agreement for the changes and in which a vote will be taken on whether to advance it to the full House.
Rep. Raul Grijalva of Arizona, the ranking Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee, expressed some dislikes about the bill’s creation of a fiscal oversight board that will have significant authority to resolve Puerto Rico’s money and debt problems. He returned last week from a three-day trip to Puerto Rico for briefings on the fiscal crisis and its effect on the island’s residents.
“This legislation is a compromise, so of course there are aspects that cause me concern,” Grijalva said. “But I am even more concerned about the humanitarian crisis unfolding on the island. The Treasury Department tells us that this combination of oversight and debt restructuring will work, and that it is a significant achievement.
Grijalva, who is aggressive on environmental conservation, had loudly criticized plans that were included in the earlier version of the bill to transfer the Vieques National Wildlife Refuge to the Puerto Rico government, fearing it could be used for possible development to raise badly needed cash.
That provision was removed from the bill, earning praise for Grijalva’s effort from Latino groups.









