Homepage  Homepage     Search on site  Search on site     To write the letter  To write the letter     Site map  Site map
Agro Perspectiva
We are on: 
   
 


Home > News

Debt Deal Delayed by Republican White House Candidates, Democrat Advocates

15.07.2011 10:12 "Agro Perspectiva" (Kyiv) — As President Barack Obama works for a bipartisan deal to raise the government’s debt ceiling, both the Republicans wanting to replace him and Democrats seeking the best way to re-elect him have emerged as obstacles. Republican presidential candidates and Democratic activists alike are using the debate to sharpen their political messages and appeal to core supporters, complicating efforts to reach a compromise to avert a possible government default on Aug. 2. «Both parties are set in concrete on what they believe their base has to have, and that makes it very difficult to find any middle ground,» said former Representative Charles Stenholm, a Texas Democrat who focused on reining in the federal budget as a lawmaker. Even as House Speaker John Boehner, an Ohio Republican, negotiated privately last week with Obama on a potential $4 trillion, decade-long deficit-reduction compromise to pave the way for raising the $14.3 trillion debt limit, Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota was drawing attention to her Republican presidential candidacy by declaring she would oppose any deal. «I will not vote to increase the debt ceiling,» she said in her first television advertisement in Iowa, site of the first contest in the nominating battle. Representative Ron Paul of Texas, another Republican White House contender, also is stressing his opposition to any debt ceiling increase, in line with his decades-long effort to shrink government’s size. The website for Paul’s presidential campaign asks in large letters on its homepage: «Will Speaker Boehner Cave on the Debt Ceiling? Or will you help Ron Paul fight to prevent Debt Ceiling Betrayal?» A campaign ad that starts airing today in Iowa and New Hampshire spotlights the issue and touts Paul as the «one candidate» who «has always been true» to cutting government spending. It also says: «No deals.» Virtually all their rivals in the Republican race have said they would balk at approving a debt-ceiling increase, unless certain debt-reduction mandates are met. On the other side of the political spectrum, Democratic political groups have been firm in opposing any agreement that would cut entitlement programs such as Social Security and Medicare. A few hours after Obama held a nationally televised news conference at the White House on July 11 to try to resurrect a longer-range agreement combining some tax increases with trims to entitlement programs, his own party’s activists swung into action in opposition. «Obama went there,» was the subject line of a July 11 e- mail circulated by Adam Green of the Washington-based Progressive Change Campaign Committee, which raises money for Democrats. The message included a petition asking like-minded activists to warn Obama with their signatures that if he backed a deal that cut entitlement benefits, «don’t ask for a penny of my money or an hour of my time in 2012.» Green has also said such an agreement would «put all Democrats facing re-election in 2012 at risk.» The group said today it has reached its goal of 200,000 signatures and intends to deliver the petitions tomorrow to Obama’s campaign headquarters in Chicago. Obama and congressional leaders are now discussing a smaller accord that would shave $2.4 trillion or less from the debt. At least some of Bachmann’s and Paul’s House colleagues, though, share their opposition to a debt-ceiling increase under any circumstances. Stenholm said, «The far right has a major influence on Republican primary politics, and we are seeing that play out in the debt-ceiling debate.» Democrats are also reacting to the most vocal elements of their party, he said. «It’s just amazing how my party continues to politicize Social Security when everybody would tell you privately that we need to do something» to bolster its finances, said Stenholm, a board member for the Washington-based Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner yesterday reiterated that the U.S. borrowing authority will run out on Aug. 2, saying there is «no way to give Congress more time» on lifting the debt ceiling. Obama in an interview with CBS News earlier this week cautioned that Social Security checks and veterans’ benefits could be delayed if Congress doesn’t act. Adding more urgency to the debate, Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services announced yesterday that it may downgrade the U.S. top-level credit rating, saying there is an increasing risk of a substantial policy stalemate enduring beyond any near-term agreement to raise the debt ceiling. The deadlock on fiscal policy has «only become more entangled» since April 18, when S&P placed a negative outlook on the U. S. AAA long-term rating, the service said in a statement. Moody’s Investors Service placed the nation’s credit rating under review for a downgrade on July 13. Bachmann responded by accusing Obama of political blackmail on the issue. «President Obama is holding the full faith in credit of the United States hostage, so that he can continue his spending spree,» she said at a July 13 news conference in Washington. Paul e-mailed his supporters blasting a last-ditch option proposed by Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky that would essentially let Obama raise the debt ceiling unilaterally if no compromise is reached. Republican lawmakers could go on record against the move but couldn’t block it. McConnell described his rationale in terms of 2012 politics, saying a default would be held against his party. Paul said McConnell was «scheming to raise the debt ceiling with no real spending cuts.» The day Obama hosted congressional leaders for a weekend session at the White House in search of a compromise, Republican presidential candidate and former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty said there was no room for one that increased taxes. «The United States federal government is not under-taxed; it spends too darn much,» Pawlenty said on ABC’s «This Week,» on July 10. Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, the Republican presidential front-runner in fundraising and polls, has made limited public comment about the debt ceiling debate. At a town hall meeting yesterday in Derry, New Hampshire, he said, «For me to be willing to raise any debt ceiling would be dependent on cutting, capping and balancing the budget with a balanced budget amendment» to the Constitution. He and seven of the party’s other presidential candidates have signed a pledge circulated by a coalition of fiscally conservative groups and Tea Party chapters known as «Cut, Cap and Balance,» in which they urge lawmakers to condition any increase in borrowing authority on those requirements. One candidate who didn’t sign was former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman, who said politicians shouldn’t commit themselves to such pledges. His spokesman, Tim Miller, said Huntsman «believes we need real cuts that are equal or greater than any increase in the debt ceiling,» and «thinks any deal should include tangible steps toward» a balanced budget amendment. A fundraising pitch Democrats sent out yesterday seeks to use the impasse in the talks to the party’s advantage. Guy Cecil, executive director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, asked in an e-mail for contributions to help Obama and Democrats «hold strong» against the Republican bargaining position. «We’re protecting our ideology here,» Cecil wrote. «Democrats believe that a great nation protects those who can’t protect themselves. We believe in helping the elderly, the poor and the sick. Republicans will attack us for it and try to take it away.» For all the political focus on the debate, investors haven’t shown many signs of reacting negatively. The yield on 10-year Treasuries was 2.97 percent as of 9:09 p.m. yesterday in New York, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader, after falling to a low this year of 2.81 percent on July 12. That compares with 3.04 percent a year ago yesterday.

Bloomberg

< Tanzanian Coffee Output May Fall 20% in 2011-12 Due to Drought, Board Says All news for
15.07.2011
U.S. Stocks Fall as Bernanke Damps Speculation on More Stimulus >

22.11.2024  
10:15 South Africa Sugar Production and Exports Estimated Down
19.11.2024  
23:04 Global Olive Oil Production Forecast to Rebound in 2024/25
22:47 Vitalii Koval discusses Ukraine's European integration with European colleagues
16:06 EBRD, European Union and United States help Kyiv prepare for winter
18.11.2024  
09:21 Agriculture Development Strategy 2030 – a roadmap to the EU
09:19 Ukrainian farmers have sown 96% of projected winter crop area
01.11.2024  
20:31 Ukraine has officially joined the International Fund for Agricultural Development
20:29 Ukrainian farmers harvested 63.7 million tonnes of grains and oilseeds
25.10.2024  
22:50 Agriculture hit hard: October port strikes rack up 30-40 million dollars in losses
21:04 Ministry of Agrarian Policy expects exports to rise in dollar terms
10:57 Ukrainian corn seed flows to Europe in further farm trade shift
24.10.2024  
23:02 Tree Nut Import Markets Highly Concentrated
23.10.2024  
11:18 Prime Minister UK warns Russian threat to global stability is accelerating as Putin ramps up attacks on Black Sea
15.10.2024  
09:35 Brazil Continues to Dominate Growth in Global Chicken Meat Exports in 2025
11.10.2024  
23:33 China Cottonseed Imports Show Strong Demand in Recent Years
20:30 India Removes Rice Export Ban, Spurring Additional Trade
30.09.2024  
17:27 List of agricultural machinery with cost compensation expanded to 11,300 items
29.09.2024  
20:21 1 in 11 people worldwide faced hunger in 2023, 1 in 5 in Africa If current trends continue, about 582 million people will be chronically undernourished in 2030, half of them in Africa
17:13 EU agri-food surplus increased in the first half of 2024
27.09.2024  
09:02 BASF presents new corporate strategy: BASF is setting a new direction for portfolio steering, capital allocation and performance culture
26.09.2024  
10:25 BASF sets new direction with corporate strategy and maintains high level of shareholder distributions
21.09.2024  
18:30 Three new sites recognized as Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems (GIAHS)
17.09.2024  
09:52 Cargill and Ducks Unlimited Working Together to Restore Watersheds Across North America
08:44 FAO calls for G20 cooperation as hunger targets continue to elude
06:40 FAO sees open trade as a cornerstone of global food security
13.09.2024  
07:08 U.S. Soybean Meal Hits 10‐Year High for Export Sales
12.09.2024  
21:26 U.S. Corn Exports Buoyed by Large Supplies
11.09.2024  
04:30 Global cereal production 2024 forecast on par with 2023 output, cereal trade likely to contract
06.09.2024  
11:35 FAO Food Price Index down marginally in August: lower sugar, meat and cereal quotations offset higher dairy and vegetable oil prices
10:34 Cargill acquires two US feed mills, strengthens production and distribution capabilities to grow with customers
05.09.2024  
09:23 PM: Plan to develop small generation facilities to reduce vulnerability to terrorism
30.08.2024  
05:03 Taras Vysotskyi discusses agricultural cooperation with Hungarian counterpart István Nagy
19.08.2024  
12:00 OTP BANK RECEIVED A $2.76 MILLION GRANT FROM USAID INVESTMENT FOR BUSINESS RESILIENCE ACTIVITY FOR CONCESSIONAL LENDING TO MICRO, SMALL, AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES
16.08.2024  
17:10 Cargill and Goanna Ag Pilot Irrigation Efficiency Technology on Mississippi Delta Cotton Fields
12.08.2024  
20:04 Ukraine Soybean Exports Forecast at Record in 2024/25
19:48 Domestic Demand and Trade Restrictions Reduce India Grain Exports
11.08.2024  
09:15 USAID Announces $3.9 billion in Direct Budget Support to the Government of Ukraine
09.08.2024  
17:41 USAID Announces $3.9 billion in Direct Budget Support to the Government of Ukraine
07.08.2024  
08:19 Turkey’s Mandarin Production and Exports to Rebound
26.07.2024  
09:28 Ongoing Economic Crisis in Argentina Impacts Dairy
15.07.2024  
10:28 Decline of China Pork Imports Continues in 2024
08:20 Lower Prices Propel Mexico 2023/24 Soybean Meal Imports
13.07.2024  
10:15 China Imports of Major Feed Grains at Record for Oct-May period
12.07.2024  
01:08 Climate risks projected to affect fish biomass around the world's ocean, FAO report says
06.07.2024  
10:15 Global cereal production 2024 forecast scaled up and now set to exceed the 2023 level
10:01 FAO Food Price Index stable in June
03.07.2024  
12:31 World pear production for MY 2023/24 is projected up more than 275,000 tons to 25.2 million
12:23 U.S. wheat exports are forecast to rebound by more than a million tons in the 2024/25 marketing year
01.07.2024  
08:58 World apple production for MY 2023/24 is forecast to rise more than 700,000 tons to 83.7 million
08:39 World coffee production for 2024/25 is forecast to rebound 7.1 million bags

Also available: 


NewsNews - News - News - News - News - News
BriefWeekly Reports - Free article
SubscriptionTariff - News&Reports
AdvertisingMagazine - Site
ConferencesForum AGRO-2013 - DAIRY WORLD-2008 - FERTILIZERS-2010
Statistics
For our clientsAgroNewsDaily - Ukrainian Grain&Oilseed Market - Fertilizers - Milk Monthly - Milk Weekly
About usAbout project - Contact
2002 -2024 © Agrarika, ltd.
tel.: +380 67 4473802; +380 67 5964652
e-mail: client@agroperspectiva.com