As U.S. Debt Ceiling is Reached, Bush Seeks to Raise It Once Again
Saturday, October 16, 2004 at 04:49AM
TheSpook
Less than a day after President Bush implied that
Senator John Kerry lacked "fiscal sanity," the Bush administration said
on Thursday that the federal government had hit the debt ceiling set by
Congress and would have to borrow from the civil service retirement
system until after the elections. Federal operations are unlikely to be
affected because Congress is certain to raise the debt limit in a
lame-duck session in November. Congressional Republicans had wanted to
avoid an embarrassing vote to raise the debt ceiling just a few weeks
before Election Day. Since Mr. Bush took office in January 2001, the
federal debt has increased about 40 percent, or $2.1 trillion, to $7.4
trillion. Congress has raised the debt ceiling three times in three
years, raising it most recently by $984 billion in May 2003. On
Thursday, Treasury Secretary John W. Snow said that the federal
government was about to breach the limit again and would be able to
keep operating only if it started tapping money intended for the civil
service retirement fund, the pension system for federal workers. "Given
current projections, it is imperative that the Congress take action to
increase the debt limit by mid-November,'' Mr. Snow warned in a
statement, declaring that his arsenal of financial tools "will be
exhausted'' at that point. [more ]
- Republican Congress Spending Money Like it Belongs to Someone else [more ]
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