Reuters. A divided U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill to suspend the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling on Wednesday (May 31), with majority support from both Democrats and Republicans to overcome opposition led by hardline conservatives and avoid a catastrophic default.
The Republican-controlled House voted 314-117 to send the legislation to the Senate, which must enact the measure and get it to President Joe Biden's desk before a Monday (June 5) deadline, when the federal government is expected to run out of money to pay its bills.
Biden said the agreement was 'good news for the American people' after the vote and urged the Senate to pass it as quickly as possible so that he could sign it into law.
The measure, a compromise between Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, drew opposition from 71 hardline Republicans. That would normally be enough to block partisan legislation, but 165 Democrats - more than the 149 Republicans who voted for it - backed the measure and pushed it through.
Republicans control the House by a narrow 222-213 majority.
''I'm an optimist that I watched division in this house. But tonight we might come together, do something very big for this nation. Don't mistake it that it's the solution. It's the beginning,'' McCarthy said earlier during a debate.
The legislation suspends - in essence, temporarily removes - the federal government's borrowing limit through Jan. 1, 2025. The timeline allows Biden and Congress to set aside the politically risky issue until after the November 2024 presidential election.
It would also cap some government spending over the next two years, speed up the permitting process for certain energy projects, claw back unused COVID-19 funds and expand work requirements for food aid programs to additional recipients.
Hardline Republicans had wanted deeper spending cuts and more stringent reforms.
Progressive Democrats - who along with Biden had resisted negotiating over the debt ceiling - oppose the bill for a few reasons, including new work requirements from some federal anti-poverty programs.
Late on Tuesday (May 30), the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office said the legislation would result in $1.5 trillion in savings over a decade. That is below the $4.8 trillion in savings that Republicans aimed for in a bill they passed through the House in April, and also below the $3 trillion in deficit that Biden's proposed budget would have reduced over that time through new taxes.