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McCarthy says debt ceiling meeting with Biden was "productive," though no deal yet

Biden, McCarthy meet on debt ceiling
President Biden, Speaker McCarthy meet on debt ceiling as next week's deadline looms 08:46

President Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy huddled in the White House once again on Monday evening, as time runs short for them to reach a deal on the debt ceiling.

After the meeting concluded, McCarthy struck an optimistic tone, and said he intends to speak with the president every day until a deal is done. 

"There's nothing agreed to — everything's being talked about," McCarthy said when asked if work requirements for assistance programs like food stamps  were still on the table.

McCarthy said he hopes they can reach an agreement that both Republicans and Democrats will be able to vote for. He also said the meeting was "more productive" than previous meetings. 

"We literally talked about where we are having disagreements and ideas," McCarthy said. "So to me that's productive. Not progress, but productive." 

In a statement, Mr. Biden also called the meeting "productive." 

At the top of their meeting, the president said he and the speaker agree default isn't an option, and they agree on the need to reduce the federal deficit. But the president said Congress needs to look at tax loopholes. McCarthy said the two have disagreements, but can agree the United States' debt is too large. 

"We're optimistic we may be able to make some progress," Mr. Biden said. 

McCarthy told reporters after the meeting that a clean debt ceiling increase was off the table, even if there's no deal at the last minute. 

"Let me be clear. No, we're never putting a clean debt ceiling on the floor," McCarthy told reporters at the Capitol. "In the Senate, a clean debt ceiling couldn't pass. In the House, it can't pass. So why should we waste time on something that's not going to pass instead of finding something that is a solution to the problem? We are too close to give up." 

President Biden Meets With Speaker McCarthy As Debt Ceiling Negotiations Continue
President Joe Biden meets with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday, May 22, 2023, to discuss the debt limit. Drew Angerer / Getty Images

The president cut short his trip to Asia, returning from Japan late Sunday night so he could work toward a deal in the final days before the June 1 deadline. Mr. Biden and McCarthy spoke on the phone while the president was aboard Air Force One en route back to Washington, and negotiators designated by the president and speaker have been trying to reach an agreement on a framework. 

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen reiterated Monday that the U.S. could be unable to pay its bills and could default on its debt as soon as June 1, although that date could still slide in either direction. And it will take time to pass any legislation through both chambers of Congress, even once the president and McCarthy reach an agreement. 

On Friday, negotiators on the Hill appeared to reach an impasse and took a brief break from talks. On Saturday, McCarthy tweeted the White House was "moving backwards in negotiations," blaming the "socialist wing of the Democrat Party" for the stall.

Republican Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina told reporters after leaving debt ceiling negotiations Monday morning that talks are at a "sensitive" place. 

A White House official says the speaker and the president agreed Tuesday that the final product must be bipartisan. But the official claimed that toward the end of the week, the speaker's team moved away from some of the options that were being discussed. For example, the White House official said, the speaker's team proposed an additional cut to food assistance that wasn't in the House-passed bill, and caps on annual funding three times longer than recent budget deals. 

But McHenry said it's "not the case" that Republicans are pushing beyond the House GOP bill.  

Mr. Biden began a press conference in Hiroshima, Japan, by saying he'd put forth more than $1 trillion in spending cuts, and "now it's time for the other side to move their extreme positions because much of what they've already proposed is simply quite frankly, unacceptable."

The president said he couldn't promise world leaders gathered for the G-7 talks that the U.S. wouldn't default on its debt. 

"I can't guarantee that they will not force a default by doing something outrageous," Mr. Biden said of Republicans. 

McCarthy on Sunday told reporters his conversation with the president on Sunday "went well." 

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