Stefanik votes against bill to keep government open

WASHINGTON, D.C. (WWNY) – North country congresswoman Elise Stefanik voted against keeping the government open Thursday.

Stefanik blamed the Democrats.

“House Democrats totally failed in their number one job to keep the government funded,” she said in a statement.

Democrats, joined by some Republicans, voted 254 – 175 to extend funding for the federal government to December 3.

“It is Nancy Pelosi’s failure that brought us to the brink of a shutdown,” Stefanik said in her statement.

“Instead of discussing bipartisan spending cuts with Republicans, Pelosi and House Democrats are working feverishly to jam through the largest tax and spending increase in our nation’s history that will hurt American families for generations to come.”

The continued funding for the federal government contains money to help the victims of this year’s natural disasters – wildfires and hurricanes – and money for Afghan refugees, but it does not fund the $3.5 trillion the Biden administration is seeking for its “Build Back Better” plan.

Had the House and Senate not voted to fund the government, it would have begun shutting down, affecting the tens of millions of people who use services from the federal government.

The back-to-back votes by the Senate and then the House will help avert one crisis, but just delay another as the political parties dig in on a dispute over how to raise the government’s borrowing cap before the United States risks a potentially catastrophic default.

The work to keep the government open and running served as the backdrop during a chaotic day for Democrats as they struggled to get Biden’s top domestic priorities over the finish line, including a bipartisan $1 trillion infrastructure bill at risk of stalling in the House.

With their energy focused on Biden’s agenda, Democrats backed down from a showdown over the debt limit in the government funding bill, deciding to uncouple the borrowing ceiling at the insistence of Republicans. If that cap is not raised by Oct. 18, the U.S. probably will face a financial crisis and economic recession, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said.

Republicans say Democrats have the votes to raise the debt limit on their own, and Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is insisting they do so.

Democrats will now turn their full attention to the need to raise the limit on federal borrowing, which now stands at $28.4 trillion.

The U.S. has never defaulted on its debts in the modern era and historically, both parties have voted to raise the limit. Democrats joined the Republican Senate majority in doing so three times during Donald Trump’s presidency. This time Democrats wanted to take care of both priorities in one bill, but Senate Republicans blocked that effort Monday.

Stefanik has called raising the debt ceiling a “blank check” for Democrats “to advance their multi-trillion dollar Far-Left agenda.”

Raising or suspending the debt limit allows the federal government to pay obligations already incurred. It does not authorize new spending. McConnell has argued that Democrats should pass a debt limit extension with the same budgetary tools they are using to try to pass a $3.5 trillion effort to expand social safety net programs and tackle climate change. He reiterated that warning as the Senate opened on Thursday, even as Democrats have labeled that option a “nonstarter.”

“We’re able to fund the government today because the majority accepted reality. The same thing will need to happen on the debt limit next week,” McConnell said.

House Democrats pushed through a stand-alone bill late Wednesday that would suspend the debt limit until December 2022. Schumer said he would bring the measure to the Senate floor, but the bill is almost certain to be blocked by a Republican filibuster.

The arguments made in both chambers about the debt ceiling have followed similar themes.

“You are more interested in punishing Democrats than preserving our credit and that is something I’m having a real tough time getting my head around,” House Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern, D-Mass., told Republicans. “The idea of not paying bills just because we don’t like (Biden’s) policies is the wrong way to go.”

Undaunted, Republicans argued that Democrats have chosen to ram through their political priorities on their own and thus are responsible for raising the debt limit on their own.

“So long as the Democratic majority continues to insist on spending money hand over fist, Republicans will refuse to help them lift the debt ceiling,” said Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla.

The Treasury has taken steps to preserve cash, but once it runs out, it will be forced to rely on incoming revenue to pay its obligations. That would likely mean delays in payments to Social Security recipients, veterans and government workers, including military personnel. The Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank, projects that the federal government would be unable to meet about 40% of payments due in the several weeks that follow.

(Additional reporting by The Associated Press)

Copyright 2021 WWNY & Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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