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The Texas Tribune
The Texas Tribune
National
Matthew Choi

14 U.S. House Republicans from Texas vote against raising the debt limit

US Representative Chip Roy, a Republican from Texas, speaks during a press conference alongside other members of the House Freedom Caucus outside of the US Capitol building on May 30, 2023 in Washington, D.C. Congress begins to examine the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 which would eliminate the debt limit for two years alongside other stipulations that Speaker McCarthy and President Biden have reached an agreement on.
US Rep. Chip Roy, R-Austin, speaks during a news conference alongside other members of the House Freedom Caucus on Tuesday in Washington, D.C. (Credit: Samuel Corum/Sipa USA via Reuters Connect)

WASHINGTON — Fourteen Texas Republicans voted Wednesday against a deal negotiated by their party and the White House to raise the debt ceiling.

The group included three far-right members — Reps. Chip Roy of Austin, Michael Cloud of Victoria and Keith Self of McKinney — who said the deal violated an agreement to reduce federal spending in exchange for their support for House Speaker Kevin McCarthy.

The other Republicans who voted against the bill, all of whom supported McCarthy in January, were U.S. Reps. Wesley Hunt of Houston, John Carter of Round Rock, Ronny Jackson of Amarillo, Tony Gonzales of San Antonio, Nathaniel Moran of Tyler, Beth Van Duyne of Irving, Pete Sessions of Waco, Morgan Luttrell of Willis, Lance Gooden of Terrell, Pat Fallon of Sherman and Randy Weber of Friendswood. Several cited concerns from constituents over the ballooning national debt.

Even so, the House voted 314-117 to approve the debt-ceiling bill, sending it to the Senate, which has until Monday to pass the bill before the Treasury Department says the federal government will run out of money.

The day before the vote, Roy told reporters that he considered the bill to be a betrayal of the agreement he, Cloud and Self made with McCarthy.

“We were a unified Republican Party standing up for the things we actually run on, actually trying to change this place, actually trying to secure the border,” Roy said Tuesday. “Unfortunately last week, there was a breach.”

The three members had voted repeatedly against McCarthy’s bid for speaker in January until they brokered an agreement that included a promise to work toward substantial reductions in federal spending. But they said the plan crafted by McCarthy and President Joe Biden to raise the debt ceiling insufficiently reduces spending and effectively gives up a major bargaining chip for Republicans.

The deal, reached over the Memorial Day holiday weekend, would eliminate the debt ceiling for two years and keep nondefense spending at roughly the same level in 2024 as in the current fiscal year. The deal ended up being a mixed bag for Republicans and Democrats, with far-right Republicans angry that it didn’t go far enough — they wanted spending reduced to fiscal year 2022 levels — and progressives disappointed in its restrictions on social safety programs.

The debt ceiling bill would require more middle-age food stamp recipients to find work, though it also would leave more people eligible for food stamps. Democrats were opposed to the work requirement, but the White House reluctantly accepted the provision.

Four Texas Democrats also voted against the bill, including Rep. Greg Casar of Austin, who said in an interview with NPR on Tuesday that the work requirement turned the deal into a “lose-lose.”

“The extremist Republicans holding the entire economy hostage don’t care about the deficit,” Casar, who serves as the whip of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said before the vote. “They’ve been caring about kicking a few people aged 50 to 54 off of their meagre food assistance.”

In addition to Casar, Democratic Reps. Joaquin Castro of San Antonio, Jasmine Crockett of Dallas and Sylvia Garcia of Houston also voted against the bill. Other Texas progressives, including Reps. Veronica Escobar, D-El Paso, and Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, voted in favor.

The bill also would expedite permitting for energy infrastructure and reduce spending for the Internal Revenue Service that was included in the Democrats’ climate and social spending bill last year. Republicans have vehemently opposed increases to the IRS budget.

Roy and the other opponents said the debt ceiling bill was a major capitulation when Republicans had the leverage to squeeze more concessions from the White House. They had previously demanded that any agreement to raise the debt ceiling also include Republican priorities like enhancing border security, rescinding new IRS funding and bolstering fossil fuels.

“Not one Republican should vote for this deal,” Roy said Tuesday. “No one sent us here to borrow an additional $4 trillion to get absolutely nothing in return but at best, if I’m being really generous, a spending freeze for a couple of years.”

Cloud, a member of the House Appropriations Committee, said the deal eliminates incentives to cut waste in federal spending by keeping topline spending levels the same. Appropriators allocate federal funding to individual programs after Congress sets overall spending levels in the budgeting process.

“This nation cannot stand one more generation of politicians in D.C. who are willing to go out and win the messaging war but fail to secure real reforms that secure the blessings of liberty for the next generation,” Cloud said.

Roy sits on the powerful House Rules Committee, which sets the conditions for House floor action on legislation. He vowed Tuesday to do what he could in committee to stop the bill as it was written, whether it means creating a rule that would allow it to be amended from the floor or killing the bill altogether.

Roy gained his seat on the committee in January negotiations with party leaders that led to McCarthy’s selection as speaker. In a tweet Monday, Roy said part of his deal with leadership included an agreement that nothing would advance out of the Rules Committee without approval from at least seven of the nine Republican members. Committee member Rep. Ralph Norman, R-South Carolina, said he would also oppose the bill, meaning Roy’s camp could have had an opportunity to kill the bill in committee with support from just one more Republican.

But that prospect evaporated when U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Kentucky, said in committee that he would support the bill.

Roy refused to answer questions Tuesday about whether he would call on McCarthy to step down as speaker if the bill goes through. One of the most hard-fought victories for the far-right members in selection of McCarthy as speaker was the right for any one member of the House to move to “vacate the chair,” leading to a vote that could oust McCarthy as speaker.

Without a deal to raise the debt ceiling, the federal government would run out of options to pay off its interest payments on past debts. It’s an outcome that economists and members of both parties warn would lead to an economic catastrophe that could reverberate around the world.

Democrats said it was hypocritical for Republicans to call for greater spending cuts when they approved spending increases and revenue decreases under President Donald Trump.

“We have voted on raising the debt ceiling every single year with every single president, Democrat and Republican, since World War II,” U.S. Rep. Sylvia Garcia, D-Houston, said. “But now somehow in 2023, McCarthy and his MAGA Republicans want to make hay about budget cuts in conjunction with the debt ceiling vote. … Where were they on Trump’s spending?”


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