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Senate Republicans Vote Down Pelosi's Debt Ceiling Bill, As Expected

Having detailed the 'debt limit game of chicken' last week, tonight's vote in the Senate is exactly what was expected.

Senate Republicans on Monday voted down the House-passed bill to fund the government through Dec. 3 and raise the debt limit.

The final vote was 48-50 (60 votes were needed to advance the measure), with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) changing his vote from Yes to No so he could later bring the bill back up for a vote.

"I changed my vote from yes to no in order to reserve the option of additional action on the House-passed legislation. Keeping the government open and preventing a default is vital to our country's future and we'll be taking further action to prevent this from happening this week," Schumer said.

All Republicans voted against the bill as expected.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has said he will vote for the "clean" continuing resolution if Democrats' move forward with that plan.

“For more than two months now Senate Republicans have been completely clear about how this process will play out. So let me make it abundantly clear one more time, we will support a clean continuing resolution that will prevent a government shutdown. ...We will not provide Republican votes for raising the debt ceiling,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).

Congress is now just 72 hours away from a potential shutdown, and as Goldman's Alec Phillips wrote today, assuming that Republicans do not vote for a debt limit suspension in the near-term, this seems likely to come to head in the second half of October.

The deadline is not entirely clear, but we think it is most likely to fall in late October.

We expect the Treasury to provide a specific projection sometime after Oct. 1.

A deadline still a few weeks off makes it less likely that Congress will deal with it in the coming week.

If not, the debt limit is likely to get tangled up in other issues later in October, including another shutdown deadline (if Democrats decide to extend spending authority for a few weeks instead of a couple of months) and the debate over the pending fiscal packages.

The most likely scenario seems to be that Democrats will need to pass a debt limit increase via the reconciliation process with only Democratic votes, but there are several procedural and political disadvantages to doing this.

With no attractive options, it is hard to see Congress acting on the debt limit until the deadline for action seems imminent.

The market is already pricing in issues until mid-November (and the bid for short-term debt has sent the early October bill yields negative...

We can already hear the virtue-signaling cries from Schumer and Pelosi over the fact that Republicans are about to plunge America into its darkest period of history ever (well at least since the January 6th amble-around-the-Capitol).

Schumer has already called the GOP position “unhinged,” arguing that there was a choice between “preserving our full faith and credit or vote in favor of an unprecedented default.”

They are “deliberately sabotaging our country’s ability to pay the bills and likely causing the country’s first-ever default in American history,” Schumer said.

To pre-empt those anguished comments, here is Nancy Pelosi herself from January/February 2018...

“Holding the debt limit hostage ... is a dangerous, illogical, and irresponsible way to express that concern,” the Democratic lawmakers wrote.

His response - in the words of Nancy Pelosi - #DoYourJob!

Tyler Durden Mon, 09/27/2021 - 19:06
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