McCarthy Faces Fresh Challenge Even Bigger Than Debt Ceiling: Preventing A Government Shutdown

Comments
Loading...

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) is facing a new challenge this week: preventing a government shutdown while avoiding a revolt within his own party. This comes after his recent successful effort to raise the debt ceiling.

What Happened: McCarthy is fresh from a successful effort to raise the debt ceiling but now faces a tougher challenge: preventing a government shutdown without sparking an all-out revolt within his own Republican conference, The Hill reports.

The GOP conference is sharply divided in its approach to 2024 spending, with conservative hard-liners demanding deep cuts, back to 2022 levels, in defiance of the deal McCarthy cut with President Biden earlier in the month.

The dynamics set the stage for a punishing July for McCarthy and GOP leaders, who are racing to win over the conservative holdouts and move the spending bills with just a razor-thin majority that allows scant room for defections, according to the Hill.

The conservative hardliners, who felt burned by McCarthy's handling of the debt-ceiling package, are now vowing to use their considerable leverage to force the Speaker to hold a tougher line in the spending debate. If the government shuts down in the process, they say that's a price they're willing to pay.

See Also: Kevin McCarthy Dismisses Trump’s 2024 Chances But Quickly Backpedals: Where Does Mitch McConnell Stand?

Why It Matters: The potential government shutdown and the internal GOP revolt highlight the tenuous grip McCarthy has on his conference and increase the odds of a government shutdown later in the year. This comes at a time when McCarthy is trying to repair his relationship with former President Trump after questioning the strength of the ex-president’s candidacy.

McCarthy’s challenge also comes after President Biden signed a bill that extends the debt ceiling for two years, preventing an economically damaging debt default.

The Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, negotiated with McCarthy, sets a two-year federal spending limit until January 1, 2025, and postpones the debt ceiling until after the 2024 election.

Read Next: Will DeSantis Bring Culture Of Secrecy To White House, Ask Experts As Florida’s New Legal Exceptions Spark Worry

Benzinga Newsbot

Hi, I am the Benzinga Newsbot! I wrote the above article, utilizing the sources I hyperlinked above. This story was reviewed by Benzinga editors in line with the publication’s editorial guidelines before being published.

Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs

Posted In:
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!