The White House stepped up its offensive against the House Freedom Caucus over the weekend after the bloc of conservatives laid out a series of demands for securing their vote to raise the nation’s debt ceiling.
In a press release formatted as a memo addressed to television show producers on Saturday, White House Communications Director Ben LaBolt accused the Republican lawmakers of threatening to cut funding for law enforcement, border security, education and manufacturing while introducing “tax breaks for the super-wealthy and wasteful spending for special interests.”
“MAGA House Republicans are proposing, if spread evenly across affected discretionary programs, at least a 20% across the board cut,” the press release read. “That means a 20% cut to law enforcement, border security, education, and manufacturing.
“These cuts will weaken our competition with China, raise costs for working families, and threaten our national security,” the release read.
The Freedom Caucus lawmakers laid out their series of demands on Friday, setting the bar in the Republican Party ahead of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy‘s return to negotiations with the White House.
Among the ultra-conservative group’s demands are reversing President Biden‘s embattled $400 billion student loan write-off, clawing back unspent COVID-19 funds, rescinding the $80 billion IRS beef-up approved last December and capping discretionary spending at 2022 levels for the next decade.
“The current debt crisis has been created solely by reckless Democrat policies and out-of-control spending,” House Freedom Caucus Chair Scott Perry, Pennsylvania Republican, said Friday. “To ensure America does not default on our debts, the House Freedom Caucus is offering a responsible solution to the self-imposed crisis.”
With nearly 50 members and allies, the Freedom Caucus has clout in the House GOP to affect negotiations. Mr. McCarthy, though, has not signaled whether he is on board with the group’s latest demands.
The group says that its plan to cap discretionary spending alone, while allowing for 1% annual growth, would save $3 trillion over the long term while “cutting the wasteful, woke and weaponized federal bureaucracy.”
The proposal flies in the face of President Biden’s recently released $6.8 trillion budget for 2024 which envisions a surge in social program spending and roughly $5.5. trillion in new taxes.
The budget, which would set the U.S. on a course for record spending as a percentage of the economy calls for an 8% increase over what the government is projected to spend in the current fiscal year.
The Treasury Department began taking “extraordinary measures” in January to stave off default when the government hit its $31.4 trillion borrowing capacity. Those emergency measures are expected to give the government enough breathing room to cover day-to-day expenses until the summer.
President Biden has called on Congress to raise the debt ceiling “without conditions” and accused Republicans of using the full faith and credit of the nation as a bargaining chip to cut vital programs such as Social Security.
Mr. McCarthy, California Republican, has said Social Security and Medicare are off the table in the debt-reduction talks but has called on Democrats to put forward a plan to reduce what he says is runaway spending.
The lawmakers behind the House Freedom Caucus plan say their plan to cap discretionary spending puts the budget “on the path to balance while protecting Social Security retirement and Medicare benefits.”
The Freedom Caucus also wants to implement Clinton-era work requirements on welfare programs.
On Saturday, the White House doubled down on claims that Republicans want to “take Medicare coverage away from millions of people.”
“MAGA Republicans are demanding nationwide application of failed state policies taking Medicaid coverage away from people who fail to meet bureaucratic work reporting requirements,” the White House press release reads.
Mr. McCarthy has signaled his intent to continue negotiations with Mr. Biden over the debt ceiling after the two held initial one-on-one talks last month.
Emerging from a briefing by the director of the Congressional Budget Office, Mr. McCarthy prodded the White House to continue talks.
“When the president delays our opportunity to negotiate together to help solve this problem, it only harms our economy more,” Mr. McCarthy said on Wednesday.
Mr. Biden has called on Republicans to release their budget proposal before he will be willing to reengage on the debt ceiling.
While the House Freedom Caucus generally represents the most conservative flank of the GOP, they wield outsized influence in the party, given the slim Republican majority in the House.
And the group showed no signs of backing down on their demands on Friday.
“Members of the House Freedom Caucus are ready to roll up our sleeves and get to work voting now on these proposals, and we’re willing to do it today,” Mr. Perry said. “America will not default on our debts unless President Biden chooses to do so.”
• Joseph Clark can be reached at jclark@washingtontimes.com.
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