WASHINGTON: The world's largest economy was headed toward an unprecedented
default, and all Washington wanted to talk about was the manner in which the
president had left a room.
A White House meeting in mid-July between President Barack
Obama and congressional leaders had ended with sharp words as Obama clashed
with the brash Republican House majority leader, Eric Cantor.
Now Cantor was back on Capitol Hill, dishing details to a scrum
of reporters -- a shift from the terse, vague statements that usually followed
such meetings.
"He said to me, 'Eric, don't call my bluff. I'm going to
the American people with this,'" Cantor said in his Southern drawl.
"I was somewhat taken aback."
Republican aides filled in the gaps. Obama had "stormed
out of the room," one said. At the White House, aides pushed back. One
official demonstrated to reporters exactly how Obama had ended the meeting --
lightly pushing his chair back from the table, standing up deliberately,
walking away calmly. "He didn't storm out. He just got up and walked into
his office," one said.
That evening -- July 13, 2011 -- was one of the lowest points
in the struggle to avert fiscal disaster and put the nation's budget on a sustainable
path.
Congress needed to extend the country's $14.3 trillion debt
ceiling before Tuesday, August 2, the date the Treasury Department would begin
running out of cash to cover the country's bills. But Republicans and Democrats
were deadlocked.
INSIDERS
UNITE
As the deadline drew closer, the two sides abandoned a series
of efforts to reach agreement, searching for the right combination of policies
and personalities to get a deal done. In the end, it fell to two
consummate Washington insiders to prevent the talks from collapsing.
A Reuters examination of the months-long showdown over the
debt ceiling found that:
* Vice President Joe Biden and Senate Republican Leader Mitch
McConnell emerged as critical players in the final stretch of the talks, as
theirs was the only cross-party relationship built on decades of trust.
* Despite a belief among many rank-and-file Republicans that
the government could muddle through a default, party leaders never doubted the
Treasury Department's warnings that economic catastrophe was a real possibility
if they didn't reach a deal by August 2.
* Although House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner, the
top U.S. Republican, was eager to strike a bold deal with Obama, it was
ultimately necessary for Boehner to distance himself from the White House to
convince his House Republicans to back the final deal.
* The business community played an important
behind-the-scenes role, with two White House foes -- Wall Street and the
Chamber of Commerce -- rallying support for a compromise backed by Obama.
This account of America's journey to the brink of default is
based on interviews conducted over the past six weeks with dozens of elected
officials, business lobbyists and aides in the House, the Senate and the White
House.
A ZEAL FOR
CUTS
The U.S. congressional elections in November 2010 set the
stage for confrontation over the congressionally mandated cap on the
outstanding total of federal government borrowings. Republicans had harnessed
voters' anxiety over the economy and soaring deficits to capture the House of
Representatives.
Accusing Obama of overreaching with his stimulus package in
2009 and his drive for healthcare reform, Republicans vowed to slash spending
and rein in the federal government's size.
A campaign document -- the "Pledge to America" --
promised to cut spending by $100 billion in the first year alone, back to the
levels in place in Republican President George W. Bush's last year in office.
The newly elected Republicans, 87 in all, were not interested
in compromise. Many felt a greater obligation to the grassroots Tea Party
activists who had sent them to Washington than to the party elders who ran the
place.
In a budget fight with the Democratic-controlled Senate that
took the government to the brink of a shutdown in April, Republicans managed to
cut spending by $38 billion, the largest domestic cut in U.S. history.
Still, 59 House Republicans voted against the bill because it
did not go far enough.
BOEHNER'S
BATTLELINES
That was a mere skirmish. The big battle lay ahead as the
government was fast running up against its $14.3 trillion credit limit and
would need Congress to raise it further. In early May, Boehner laid out his
conditions for a debt-ceiling increase: spending cuts would need to exceed the
amount of new borrowing authority.
Instead of billions of dollars, the debate would be measured
in the trillions.
It would be a chance for Boehner to show his new troops that
he could use the levers of Washington to get results.
An avid golfer and a chain-smoker, the 61-year-old Boehner is
from an older generation than many of the Tea Party conservatives whose
election to Congress made it possible for him to become House Speaker.
The seasoned legislator and former businessman grew up in
Ohio from a family of modest means and worked as a janitor to help put himself
through college.
Obama, 49, had a comfort level with fellow Midwesterner
Boehner despite their philosophical differences. The speaker reminded the
president, a former state senator from Illinois, of Republican legislators he
used to play poker with in Illinois and with whom he forged bipartisan deals.
Both men are even-tempered and view themselves as Washington
outsiders. Each has ambitions of transforming Washington and making a big mark
on policy.
Those aspirations drove their on-again, off-again talks aimed
at a far-reaching, bipartisan "grand bargain" that would put the
United States on sounder fiscal footing for years to come.
On a golf outing in mid-June, the two agreed to work together
on a broad deficit-reduction deal. "Let's give it a try," Obama told
the speaker.
The following week, at a secret White House meeting, they
agreed to have their staff draw up options. The aim was to craft a plan that
would cut deficits by roughly $4 trillion over 10 years.
A 'GRAND
BARGAIN?'
The challenges were steep. Democrats would have to agree to
rein in cherished social programs like the Medicare health plan for retirees
and the disabled. Republicans would have to accept a tax-code overhaul that
would increase revenues through the elimination of tax breaks and deductions.
Boehner's enthusiasm for the "grand bargain" was
not shared by his colleague, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.
McConnell had confided to Vice President Joe Biden that he
thought it was unrealistic to try to accomplish such a sweeping deal in the
weeks before August 2 deadline.
The Senate Republican leader worried it would lead to a dead
end when pressure was building to resolve the debt-limit standoff. Rating
agencies were warning they might downgrade the country's top-notch credit score
and, while there was no sign of panic yet in financial markets,
investors were growing nervous.
McConnell, 69, had served in the Senate since 1985 and
witnessed firsthand the divided-government battles of the 1990s, when
Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich and an earlier generation of firebrand
conservatives went toe-to-toe with Democratic President Bill Clinton.
MEMORIES OF
1996
That confrontation led to a shutdown of the federal
government and provoked a public backlash against Gingrich and his party. With
the Republican brand tarnished, Clinton sailed to re-election in 1996.
McConnell, whose party is a minority in the closely divided
Senate, viewed the 2012 elections as a chance to gain dominance in the chamber.
He feared the debt-limit fight would put that in jeopardy
while also bolstering Obama's re-election prospects.
If Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's warnings were right
-- and both McConnell and Boehner believed they were despite skepticism among
their rank-and-file -- the fallout from a debt default would be calamitous,
causing stocks and the dollar to sink and interest
rates to surge.
Mortgage rates and business borrowing costs would spike,
potentially sending the economy into another recession. That would mean
Republicans -- whom Democrats had accused of intransigence over the debt limit
-- would share in the blame for the economy's woes and suffer voter wrath as a
result.
Many in the White House viewed McConnell as more of a
tactician than a visionary and someone more focused on party politics than on
setting policy. In the quest for a grand bargain, Boehner would make a better
partner, they thought.
But in the end, after Boehner twice broke off talks with the
White House, administration officials relied heavily on McConnell as an
emissary to the speaker, and came to view him as a crucial player.
A BOND
BETWEEN RIVALS
The administration's chief link to McConnell was Biden, 68, a
36-year veteran of the Senate with rock-solid Democratic credentials who
nonetheless had a strong rapport with the Republican leader.
The two seemed to speak the same language from their years in
the Senate together. Their bond grew closer when they worked together on a
tax-cutting deal just before Christmas late last year, according to people who
know both men.
"C'mon Mitch, you know what I'm dealing with here,"
Biden would sometimes tell McConnell -- Senate-speak to describe the pushback
he would face from Democratic Party activists if he gave too much ground.
According to a former Biden aide, McConnell seemed to
appreciate that Biden understood the GOP leader faced similar constraints
within the Republican Party.
In April, Obama tapped Biden to lead a panel of lawmakers
that would lay the groundwork for a deal. In an ornate corner room just off the
Senate floor, the group pored through stacks of government and private-sector
reports to identify more than $1 trillion in mutually acceptable spending cuts.
As the talks stretched into June, Biden gradually built up a
rapport with Cantor, the House majority leader, who was leading the Republican
side.
REPUBLICAN
RIFT
In less than 10 years in Washington, Cantor had quickly
climbed to the top rungs of Republican leadership. But his sharp elbows had
earned him enemies -- some from within his own party.
He and Boehner had a cool relationship, say people who know
both lawmakers. The rift extended into the lobbying community, where
Republicans identified themselves as "Boehner people" or "Cantor
people."
At the end of June, Cantor abruptly walked out of the Biden
talks, saying the two sides could not agree on taxes. The
"principals" -- Obama and Boehner -- would have to take it from
there.
Even before the Biden talks began, members of Boehner's
office dismissed them as political theater.
"This thing will ultimately get decided by Boehner and
Obama," a Boehner aide said.
After weeks of back-channel negotiations with Obama, Boehner
decided on July 22 that he could not work with the White House and would have
to forge a deal with Democrats on Capitol Hill.
The two sides had come tantalizingly close to a deal, but
stumbled again over the tax question.
Boehner felt the White House had shifted the goalposts at the
last minute.
White House officials believed Boehner's departure stemmed
from an unwillingness -- or an inability -- to take on the conservative rebels
in his party. If Boehner had been willing to shake hands publicly with Obama on
a "grand bargain," they said, there would have been a way to woo
enough mainstream Republicans and Democrats to pass the bill.
They also disagreed with any suggestions that they had
shifted the goalposts.
'A BOWL OF
JELL-O'
"Dealing with the White House is like dealing with a
bowl of Jell-O," Boehner said angrily at a press conference that night.
Obama called him back to the White House the following day
and told him he should not be left out of the process.
"Mr. President, as I read the Constitution, the Congress
writes the laws. You get to decide if you want to sign them," Boehner
responded, according to his aides.
The action moved back to Congress. Like the deal that Boehner
and the White House had abandoned, the latest plan would separate the
relatively easy decisions -- curbs on annual discretionary spending -- from the
difficult reforms to benefits and the tax code.
It wasn't the "grand bargain" Obama and Boehner had
sought, but it would deliver trillions in savings and cover the nation's
borrowing needs past the November 2012 elections.
There was one catch. The plan would require another
debt-ceiling vote in a few months to ensure Congress would sign off on the
second set of savings, and Obama had already ruled that out.
Around 10 p.m., on Saturday, July 23, Obama called Boehner to
tell him he would veto the bill if it reached his desk. But he suggested that they
could find another way to ensure Congress would actually follow through with
the tax and benefit changes envisioned by the plan.
GOING
SEPARATE WAYS
Congressional staff continued work on the plan the next day.
Boehner told Fox News he would press ahead with his own legislation if the two
sides could not agree. With no progress made on the enforcement mechanism,
known as a "trigger" in Washington-speak, that appeared to be the
case.
Boehner told Republicans he would unveil his version of the
plan on Monday, July 25, while the Democratic leader of the Senate, Harry Reid,
decided to advance a rival plan. Another effort had failed.
The final week would put Boehner's leadership to the test.
Boehner unveiled his plan to Republicans that Monday in a
meeting room in the bowels of the Capitol. It wouldn't tie a debt-limit
increase to the balanced-budget constitutional amendment, as many of them
wanted, but it would deliver more than $2 trillion in savings. A vote was set
for Wednesday, July 27.
Boehner launched a two-front lobbying blitz, alternating
between in-person meetings with wavering lawmakers and phone calls to
conservative media figures like talk radio host Rush Limbaugh and columnist
Charles Krauthammer.
On Monday night, he touted the plan directly to a national
audience, as television networks granted him air time to respond to a
prime-time speech by Obama.
'READY TO
DRIVE THE CAR'
Boehner's rally continued on Tuesday morning at the Capitol
Hill Club, a social club for Republicans. Boehner's lieutenants took the lead.
Cantor bluntly acknowledged that "the debt limit sucks." Kevin
McCarthy, the House Republican whip, or lead vote counter, showed a clip from
"The Town," a 2010 movie about bank robbers.
"I need your help," said a character played by Ben
Affleck. "You can never ask me about it later and we're gonna hurt some
people."
"Whose car are we going to take?" asks another
character.
The message: it was time to get the job done, no matter how
messy. The film clip appeared to win over at least one convert.
Representative Allen West, an outspoken Tea Party-aligned
freshman, stood up and shouted: "I'm ready to drive the car!"
OBAMA'S
UNLIKELY ALLIES
But momentum shifted as the day wore on. Outside conservative
groups like the Club for Growth and the Heritage Foundation urged a vote
against the bill.
At the White House, aides were batting away suggestions that
Obama had been sidelined.
"He's working tirelessly, meeting with his economic
team, doing a lot of outreach, exploring all opportunities for
compromise," said senior White House adviser Valerie Jarrett.
Obama worked the phones, talking strategy with Democratic
leaders and developing options for the final endgame.
Jarrett, one of the administration's envoys to the business
community, said her phone was ringing off the hook with calls from retailers
and other business owners worried about the prospect of another debt-limit
fight in December if Obama was forced to accept Boehner's two-step plan.
The White House was also actively reaching out to the
business community to spell out the dire consequences of a default.
The administration found an ally in the Chamber of Commerce,
a group traditionally aligned with Republicans, who now urged the party to back
the bill.
The financial services industry was also on the same page as
the administration on this issue, despite its many skirmishes with the White
House during the debate over Wall Street reform in 2010.
JAMMED
CIRCUITS
In his public address on Monday night, Obama had implored
Americans to intervene directly by calling, emailing or posting messages on
Twitter to their lawmakers.
Telephone circuits on Capitol Hill seized up, email messages
bounced back and Web sites crashed under the load.
The anxiety at the White House was building.
"It's fair to say that nobody here had any doubt that
this was going to go right up to the line, even as we urged Congress not to
take it right up to the line," one administration official said.
"That's just the way Congress works."
Still, the path toward a deal was far from clear.
Over at Treasury, Geithner was trying to figure out what to
do if Congress failed to reach a deal in time.
Should the government make debt service a top priority to
prevent a meltdown on Wall Street? That could delay paychecks to soldiers,
benefit checks to retirees, and payments to government contracts, sending
ripples through the economy.
Back at the Capitol, Boehner's troubles mounted.
Representative Jim Jordan,
a leader of the Republican Party's right wing, predicted Boehner wouldn't get
the votes he needed from his own party. Democrats united against his bill.
The Congressional Budget Office, the official scorekeeper,
said it would only deliver $850 billion in savings, rather than the $1.2
trillion it claimed. Late that evening, Boehner decided to rewrite the bill to
make sure it complied with the party's vow to extract spending cuts greater
than the size of the debt limit increase. That put off a vote until at least
Thursday.
'FIRE HIM!'
The acrimony spilled into the open Wednesday morning, July
27, in the party's basement meeting room.
Representative Greg Walden, a Boehner ally, read aloud an
email from a Jordan staffer that urged outside conservative groups to convince
undecided members to vote against the bill. Many lawmakers in the room viewed
the message as a betrayal of the Speaker. As the Jordan staffer stood
uncomfortably against a wall, lawmakers chanted, "Fire him! Fire
him!"
The usually jovial Boehner turned the screws. "Get your
ass in line," he said. There was laughter, but the message was
unmistakable.
As the meeting adjourned, lawmakers predicted the bill would
pass. But a large number remained on the fence. Boehner spent the day listening
to their concerns -- the cuts weren't big enough, the special committee might
raise taxes, the balanced-budget amendment has been watered down.
Thursday morning, July 28: another meeting, another chance to
rally the troops over fruit and doughnuts and signs that read "Play like a
champion." Representative Mike Kelly, an alumnus of Notre Dame University,
drew upon his school's storied legacy as he urged members to "put on your
helmet, buckle your chin straps, run out onto the field and beat the shit out
of your opponent!"
Doubters like Jordan stayed silent. As the meeting adjourned,
they told reporters that their opposition had not changed.
With the rewritten bill ready to go, Republican leaders
scheduled a vote for late Thursday afternoon. As debate started on the House
floor, Boehner, Majority Leader Cantor and Whip McCarthy continued to meet with
doubters, making the case that the party needed to stick together if it wanted
an acceptable final product.
At 5:25 p.m., the Republican troika abruptly yanked the bill
from the House floor with only one minute left of debate. They didn't have the
votes.
'BLOODY AND
BEATEN'
As floor action turned to naming post offices, Boehner
summoned the holdouts to his office just off the Capitol rotunda. Whatever he
was doing wasn't changing any minds.
"I'm a bloodied and beaten 'no,'" said
Representative Louie Gohmert of Texas, one of several conservatives who had
downplayed the consequences of a technical default, as he left the office.
At the beginning of the year, Republicans had enacted a ban
on earmarks, the pet spending projects that had come to symbolize waste and
corruption in the public imagination. That meant that Boehner had fewer carrots
to offer reluctant members -- no highway overpasses.
"It is the most refreshing thing in the world to see what
is going on here. These kinds of negotiations a couple of years ago would have
cost $20 billion," said Representative Jeff Flake of Arizona, whose
anti-spending stance had made him an outcast in the party in the past decade.
The five Republicans who represent South Carolina headed from
Boehner's opulent suite to the Capitol's small, private chapel to pray.
As they knelt beneath a stained glass window depicting George
Washington, they weren't praying for guidance, just strength to maintain their
stand.
"I think divine inspiration has already happened. I was
a 'lean-no,' now I'm a 'no,'" said Representative Tim Scott.
19 BOXES OF
PIZZA
The action moved downstairs to McCarthy's office. The jovial
46-year-old Republican whip, from California's dusty interior, was a novice
vote counter. He had presided over a few embarrassing setbacks earlier in the
year. Now he was facing a true disaster.
As the night wore on, 19 boxes of pizza from Al's Pizzeria
disappeared into McCarthy's office.
The holdouts weren't looking for pork-barrel spending or
other favors -- though they didn't refuse the pizza. Instead, they wanted to
strengthen the balanced-budget clause. That would certainly doom the bill in
the Senate, but at that point Boehner just wanted to get it out of the House.
Even with that change, Boehner still appeared to be short of
the 217 votes he needed. At 10:30 on Thursday night, the House adjourned
without a vote.
House Republicans met in their basement clubhouse again on
Friday morning, July 29. The holdouts came under more pressure -- this time
from other rank-and-file members who said they were undermining the party's
negotiating position. But a final count showed that the votes appeared to be
there.
"I love you guys," Boehner said in a moment of
levity.
The bill passed Friday evening on a vote of 218 to 210 --
just one vote more than needed. The Senate defeated it two hours later, and the
House retaliated on Saturday by defeating a proposal put forth by Harry Reid,
leader of the Democratic majority in the Senate.
Another week had elapsed, and Congress was no closer to
consensus.
While the legislative chess game played out, Biden called
McConnell on Wednesday and Friday.
MCCONNELL'S
BOTTOM LINE
Out of loyalty to Boehner, the Senate Republican leader had
refrained from talks with the White House for most of the week.
On Friday morning, McConnell told Biden there was "no
daylight" between the two Republicans, but told the vice president to try
later in the day.
"Call me back after these votes and I will tell you what
it will take to get my support," McConnell said, according to a Republican
aide.
Biden and McConnell spoke again Friday evening and in the
early afternoon on Saturday. Negotiations began in earnest around 3 p.m., after
the House defeated Reid's bill.
Tuesday, August 2, was three days away.
White House chief of staff Bill Daley's office became Grand
Central Station for a rolling series of meetings among White House staff. The
meetings moved on Sunday to the vice president's office and later to the Oval
Office.
On Saturday, Obama asked Biden's chief of staff, Bruce Reed,
whether his wife was angry that he was spending his wedding anniversary at the
office.
"Previously, I was on negative watch but I've now been
officially downgraded," Reed deadpanned.
CLIMACTIC
PHONE CALLS
After months of high-profile meetings, nearly all of the
negotiations on the final weekend took place by phone.
In the big gatherings, participants tended to emphasize
"talking points" because of the expectation that the conversations
would spill out into the public. Smaller meetings allowed participants to cut
to the chase, according to an administration official, and details could remain
private.
On Saturday night, a media report surfaced that there was a
tentative framework for a deal.
White House reporters seeking an update chased a top
communications aide toward the Oval Office, only to be told later that the two
sides had not arrived at a deal yet.
Indeed, the negotiations ended up going down to the wire.
At 5 p.m. on Sunday night, White House officials discussed
whether Treasury Secretary Geithner should make a statement to the financial
markets that evening or perhaps the following morning.
GEITHNER'S
GAME
Geithner, in his former role as head of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York, was one of the chief financial firefighters during the global
markets meltdown triggered by the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September
2008.
Asian markets were about to open. The crisis had already
roiled U.S. debt markets and taken a toll on the dollar and Wall Street stocks.
Administration officials feared worse bloodletting if
investors returned to their desks at the start of the week without clarity on
whether there would be a deal.
Geithner and a small team of aides had been quietly working
on contingency plans in case Congress missed the August 2 deadline to raise the
debt ceiling. Treasury had planned to brief markets on those plans no later
than Monday.
Private-sector analysts believed that in a worst-case
scenario, Geithner would be prepared to tell markets he would put a priority on
paying the government's debt in order to avoid default -- even if that meant
taking the politically explosive step of delaying payments to Social Security
recipients and others.
PULLING THE
TRIGGER
But the Treasury secretary never had to show his hand.
The final sticking point in the talks centered on the terms
of the deficit-cutting "trigger." Democrats wanted automatic cuts in
military spending if Congress balked at the second round of deficit reduction.
Biden and McConnell spoke four times on Saturday, five times
on Sunday, circling around the two stumbling blocks that remained -- the nature
of the "trigger" and the size of the defense cuts that Democrats
wanted. McConnell kept in contact with Boehner.
On Sunday, July 31, there were less than two full days before
Default Day. As Obama's budget director, Jack Lew, crunched numbers on the
Republican defense cut proposals, the White House feared it might not get a
deal. Biden spoke with Boehner around 4 p.m. and said, "We just can't get
there."
McConnell floated a compromise to widen the trigger to all
security-related programs -- the State Department, veterans' care, nuclear
security -- and not just the Pentagon.
At 8:15 p.m. Sunday, Obama made a final call to Boehner as White
House aides listened nearby.
"Do we have a deal?" Obama asked.
There was a moment of suspense, then: "Congratulations
to you, too, John."
Source : Reuters
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