Senate Rejects Republican Plan Tied to Borrowing Limits
By Kathleen Hunter - Oct 30, 2013
The U.S. Congress is taking up legislation on federal borrowing authority this week that wont prevail because of the political split between the chambers, leaving in place the debt-ceiling suspension passed Oct. 16.
The Senate voted 54-45 along party lines against advancing the measure, offered by the chambers top Republican, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. The Republican-controlled House began debate today on similar legislation and is set to vote on it tomorrow. The House probably will adopt the resolution, though it wont become law because the Senate turned it down.
I look forward to quickly dispensing with this Republican resolution, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, said today on the Senate floor.
The mechanism letting Congress vote to disapprove of the increase in U.S. borrowing authority was in the law that ended a 16-day government shutdown and suspended the debt cap until Feb. 7. The approach, pioneered by McConnell in 2011 legislation raising the debt ceiling, is designed to give Republicans a chance to go on the record opposing an increase in federal borrowing authority.
Twenty-seven Senate Republicans joined 54 Democrats on Oct. 16 to raise the federal debt limit, opening the door to the disapproval votes. Four Republicans facing Tea Party-backed primary challenges -- McConnell, Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Thad Cochran of Mississippi -- voted for the legislation.
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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-10-29/senate-rejects-republican-plan-tied-to-borrowing-limits.html