As President Joe Biden meets with congressional leaders Tuesday about raising the debt ceiling, Republicans, led by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy of California, insist they are serious about negotiating a deal. House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, told “Fox News Sunday” that Biden “negotiated as vice president and as a senator. We’re just asking him to be a responsible leader and do that again.” In a letter to the president, 43 Republican senators, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, declared themselves “united” behind their House counterparts, who have “taken a responsible first step in coming to the table with their proposals.”
If more than a handful of Republicans really want to compromise with Biden, it would be a first. There’s a simple test, though, to determine whether the GOP is negotiating in good faith — and it can be found in the president’s budget proposal to repeal Trump-era tax cuts. If Republicans agree that any deal will include raising taxes on the wealthy and/or corporations, then a solution might be possible. But in the more likely scenario that they say tax increases are off the table, it would confirm beyond any shadow of doubt that McCarthy’s own debt limit bill isn’t an invitation to negotiate. It’s a ransom note.
At the outset, Biden should ask a simple question: “Are revenues on the table?”
As Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi told the Senate Budget Committee last week, the debt can’t be lowered without crashing the economy just by reducing government spending. More revenue would also be needed. “We can’t do it with one [and] without the other,” Zandi said. “Both have to be done.”
Biden’s budget provides a template for the revenue side: repealing the 2017 Trump tax cuts for those making more than $400,000 a year, increasing capital gains taxes on millionaires and closing the “carried interest” and “pass-through” loopholes, which overwhelmingly favor the wealthy. Biden’s proposal would also partly repeal former President Donald Trump’s corporate tax cut, which never delivered the benefits that — stop me if you’ve heard this one before — Republicans promised would trickle down.
Obviously, not all of those measures would make it into a debt-ceiling compromise. But if we’re playing along with Republicans’ fiction that this is a real negotiation, then both sides will get something. That’s why at the outset, Biden should ask a simple question: “Are revenues on the table?” The likelier answer is “no.”
The House’s recent debt limit vote — which McCarthy allies now are portraying as a victory after he spent months trying to avoid passing such a bill — illustrated how tight the restraints on McCarthy are. Rep. Ralph Norman, R-Va., a member of the far-right Freedom Caucus, told Politico that McCarthy wooed the group by characterizing the bill as a floor, not a ceiling. That’s the exact opposite of an opening bid. A McCarthy spokesman didn’t dispute Norman’s characterization. Any hint that McCarthy is considering increased revenues would immediately put him at risk of being ousted as speaker.
Establishing Republicans’ intentions immediately is important for three reasons. First, it clarifies how much time Washington has before default. Thanks in part to McCarthy’s dawdling, lawmakers have just a handful of working days before June 1, the earliest possible default date, according to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. If a deal is somehow on the table, it must be struck quickly to get through Congress before then. If not, then the White House knows it can spend the next few weeks preparing the country for alternative steps, such as invoking the 14th Amendment. Similarly, House Democrats could focus exclusively on gathering the signatures for a discharge petition, which would force a vote on a clean debt ceiling.








