t; <lm26254@flash.net>,
<uwsa@uwsa.com>
Subject: [money-ethics] We need to send letters to Congresscritters on this
issue
Tell your congresscritter and Senators that
if they pass Bush's tax cuts while approving the largest debt ceiling increase
in history they will be toast come next election.
washingtonpost.com
White House Urges
Senate To Raise Debt Ceiling Soon
GOP to Face Issue While Pushing Tax Cut
By Helen Dewar and John M. Berry
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, May 20, 2003; Page E01
The Bush administration warned the Senate yesterday that it must increase the
government's debt ceiling by May 28, putting new pressure on Republicans to
acknowledge mounting debt as they push to enact President Bush's tax cuts. It
is a coincidence of timing that Democrats are eager to exploit.
Even before the formal warning, Senate GOP leaders had scheduled a vote on
raising the debt limit for later this week, just before Congress leaves for a
week-long Memorial Day recess. Republicans said they believed they had the
votes to pass the measure without amendment, probably by Thursday.
But the warning underscores the necessity for prompt action, providing
ammunition to Republicans in arguing against amendments that would force the
measure back to the House, which is famously skittish about debt bills.
Treasury officials said yesterday that they had found room to borrow an
additional $20 billion, allowing the sale of more Treasury securities today --
scheduled for yesterday but postponed last week. But the government has now run
out of options in avoiding the debt ceiling, Secretary John W. Snow said in a
letter to the Senate.
With the newfound $20 billion, Treasury has engaged in a series of maneuvers
involving various government trust funds and accounts -- and drawn down its
usual cash cushion -- and cleared a cumulative $135 billion worth of borrowing
authority, officials said. "We had hoped we would not have to go [so
far]," Brian Roseboro, assistant Treasury secretary for financial markets,
said in an interview. "We have had to disrupt the Treasury bill market,
which we do not like to do. We were able to justify [the last $20 billion], but
we are at the end. We have exhausted every prudent and legal fiscal management
thing we can use," Roseboro said.
Even the added $20 billion worth of authority will last only until the middle
of next week, he said. "Now the ball is in Congress's court," he
added.
A number of analysts and bond market traders voiced annoyance at the delay in
the usual sale of Treasury bills, which disrupted the normal flow of securities
into the market. In his letter to the Senate, Snow said, "An immediate
permanent increase in the debt limit is crucial to preserve the confidence in
the U.S. government and to prevent uncertainty that would adversely affect our
economic recovery." Among the payments that would be jeopardized, he said,
are $21 billion in individual and business tax refunds, $5 billion to active
and retired military personnel, $12 billion to defense suppliers and more than
$40 billion in Social Security and Medicare benefits.
Congress nearly always balks at raising the ceiling because increased debt
reflects lawmakers' failure to balance the government's books. This year the
vote is especially painful for several reasons.
One is that the proposal to increase the current $6.4 trillion debt by another
$984 billion would be the largest one-time increase in history, coming only a
few years after budget surpluses led Bush administration officials to forecast
an end to the national debt.
Another is timing. The House and the Senate are entering the final stretch
toward passage of the third-largest tax cut in history, and the Congressional
Budget Office recently raised its deficit forecast for 2003 to more than $300
billion, a record, without counting the cost of the new tax bill or
supplemental spending for the war in Iraq and homeland security. Democrats have
not been shy about linking tax cuts and debt.
Republican leaders face a third challenge: as many as a dozen Democratic
amendments, including one to cut the size of the debt-ceiling increase by more
than half, which would force several more debt-ceiling votes before next year's
elections. The House passed its version of the bill as part of its budget
resolution, freeing it from any direct votes on the debt issue. But any change
by the Senate would send the bill back to the House, putting Republicans on the
spot. Last year a smaller debt limit increase passed the House by only one
vote.
The outcome could be especially important to Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist
(R-Tenn.), who is trying to repair strained relations with House Republican
leaders after a dust-up in which they faulted him for agreeing to a tax-cut
deal among Senate Republicans without telling them about it. Failure to hold
the line against Democratic amendments on the debt bill would almost certainly
reopen the wounds.
If a conference is required, Roseboro said Congress would have to remain in
session to pass the debt limit increase rather than depart for a week-long
Memorial Day recess.
"The Congess just has to have a fire drill. They just have to do it at the
end of the week," Roseboro said.
According to yesterday's announcement, today Treasury will sell $16 billion
each in three- and six-month bills, followed Wednesday by $22 billion in
four-week bills. In addition, tomorrow Treasury will sell $4 billion in a
cash-management bill that will mature next Tuesday.
The four auctions totaling $58 billion will allow Treasury to repay holders of
$44.3 billion worth of maturing securities and raise approximately $9.7 billion
in new cash. That will use up about half of the additional $20 billion in
borrowing authority mentioned by Roseboro.
If Senate action on the debt ceiling does not occur by Thursday morning,
Treasury will have to postpone an announcement scheduled for that day regarding
an auction of two-year notes to be held May 28, he said. Similarly,
announcement of next week's regular bill auctions would have to be postponed as
well. Next week's bill auctions would normally be held Tuesday rather than
Monday because of the Memorial Day holiday.
2003 The Washington Post Company