After trying to wage a war they’ve already lost, House Republicans threw up their hands and passed a clean debt-limit bill on Tuesday.
The bill, which passed 221-201, suspends the country’s borrowing limit until March 15, 2015. Twenty-eight GOP members voted for the measure, which the Senate is expected to pass later this week.
The move came less than 24 hours after the GOP had unveiled a proposal to attach a reversal of military pension cut to raising the borrowing limit. That prompted a fierce backlash by conservatives who pointed out that the plan actually increased entitlement spending, flying in the face of the GOP’s argument that the debt limit should be a check on Washington’s out-of-control budget.
“It’s the fact that we don’t have 218 votes. If you don’t have 218 votes you have nothing,” House Speaker John Boehner told reporters on Tuesday morning. By technically “suspending” the borrowing limit, the 28 House Republicans who voted for the bill avoided having to be on the record for raising the debt ceiling. But it’s essentially a distinction without a difference.
It’s the outcome that most observers were expecting anyway. Republicans, after all, just overwhelmingly voted to pass a $1 trillion spending package after losing the painful shutdown battle. But Boehner decided to let the caucus go through the motions one more time, perhaps to show them just how little leverage they have left.









