Debt Ceiling: McCarthy succeeds in bringing his agreement with Biden to the floor of the House of Representatives
The Rules committee approved by a narrow 7-6 vote that the default avoidance pact be voted on by all legislators.
The full House of Representatives will vote on Wednesday on the bill that aims to avert a default. After a tense vote, with several Republican lawmakers rejecting it outright, Speaker Kevin McCarthy got his pact with Joe Biden through the House Rules Committee by a vote of 7 to 6.
Republican Congressmen Ralph Norman and Chip Roy added their votes of rejection to those of the four representatives of the Democratic minority. A result that augurs a tough battle in the plenary, despite the efforts of the leaders of both parties and the president himself to convince his colleagues of the need to avoid defaulting on the debt.
Thomas Massie, key vote
The key to bringing the rule to the floor was the vote of Republican Thomas Massie. Despite his initial opposition to the agreement, the conservative legislator voted "yes" so that the congressmen as a whole could decide: "There are things to dislike and things to like about this bill. When people want to express their ideology, the floor of the House on the actual final passage of the bill is the place to do that."
"A bad deal" that "no Republican should vote for"
In an appearance true to his blunt style, Roy stressed that "no Republican should vote for this deal." According to the Texan representative, "it's a bad deal. Nobody sent us here to borrow another 4 trillion to get absolutely nothing in return."
Norman: majority prefers default to pact
Also emphatic in his rejection was Norman, who shared a Rasmussen poll on his twitter account indicating that a majority of Americans, and 74% of Republican voters prefer default to the McCarthy-Biden deal. He also shared tweets of rejections from other conservative representatives.
The lesser evil, according to Cole
In a statement, the committee's chairman, Republican Tom Cole, stressed that there is always dissatisfaction in a deal, but that it is the best alternative to a default "that would devastate the entire U.S. economy."