The Obama administration welcomed the key passage of a bill through the House of Representative on Wednesday to temporarily suspend the nation’s debt ceiling.
White House spokesman Jay Carney reiterated the Obama administration would have preferred a longer extension to dodge these lingering issues in the near future. But the president would likely “not stand in the way” of the short-term fix.
In a 285-144 vote, the GOP controlled House of Representatives elected to authorize a suspension of borrowing limit until May 19 – effectively pushing back the next debt ceiling showdown for another few months. The measure says the debt limit “shall not apply” during that period, therefore allowing the Treasury to continue to pay the country’s bills incurred until that date.
“With the passage of this bill today it’s pretty clear that we’re sending a message to the Democrat-controlled Senate it’s time to do your job. It’s as simple as, the principle I think is pretty simple: No budget, no pay,” House Speaker John Boehner said following the passage of the No Budget, No Pay Act. “Listen, American families have to do a budget, they understand you can’t continue to spend money that you don’t have.”
GOP lawmakers adopted the new slogan in debt ceiling dealings to call attention to the Senate’s failure to pass a budget, and shift attention off themselves.









